involve a variety of interactions and driving forces between inorganic hard core, organic soft surface-coating ligands, and surrounding solvent molecules. [2,[7][8][9] As a consequence, a thorough understanding of a solvent-mediated assembly process is required to produce NC solids with programmable properties.Here, we have chosen lead sulfide (PbS) nanocrystals as a model system for the investigation of the in situ self-assembly due to the possibility to produce monodisperse particles in a colloidal solution with a precisely controlled size. Additionally, the unique electronic properties of semiconductor PbS NCs with tunable bandgap make them attractive for many potential technological applications, including solar cells, light-emitting diodes, transistors, photodetectors, etc. [10][11][12][13] The structure and degree of order in NC superlattices depend on several factors, such as NC size and shape, ligand length, grafting density, ligand-solvent interactions, NC concentration, solvent evaporation rate (in case of evaporative assembly), and cell geometry or substrate where the assembly takes place. Thus, recent studies on lead chalcogenide NC assemblies revealed the formation of face-centered cubic (fcc) or body-centered cubic (bcc) superstructures as well as lattice distorted facecentered tetragonal (fct) and body-centered tetragonal (bct) superlattices. [14][15][16][17][18] However, their assembling mechanism remains largely unresolved mainly due to the challenge in measuring intermediate transitions between the initial colloidal state and the final superlattice state, especially in real time.Recently, in situ scattering methods have emerged as a powerful characterization tool to study the nucleation and growth of nanoparticle superlattices. [19][20][21][22] Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) allows for monitoring the self-assembly dynamics with subsecond temporal resolution over large sample volumes under controlled conditions (e.g., controlled solvent vapor environment and temperature) and provides realtime information on long range order in the assembled structures. Often, the grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS) technique is applied for in situ measurements, where a drop of nanocrystal suspension is placed on a substrate and evaporated in a controlled manner. [16,20,23,24] However, at small incident angles of the X-ray beam GISAXS is able to probe only up to several monolayers and is thus limited to the surface regime. For bulk measurements transmission SAXS is Self-assembled nanocrystal superlattices have attracted large scientific attention due to their potential technological applications. However, the nucleation and growth mechanisms of superlattice assemblies remain largely unresolved due to experimental difficulties to monitor intermediate states. Here, the self-assembly of colloidal PbS nanocrystals is studied in real time by a combination of controlled solvent evaporation from the bulk solution and in situ small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) in transmission geometry. For the fi...