Over the past 25 years, the field of colloidal crystal
templating
of inverse opal or three-dimensionally ordered macroporous (3DOM)
structures has made tremendous progress. The degree of structural
control over multiple length scales, understanding of mechanical properties,
and complexity of systems in which 3DOM materials are a component
have increased substantially. In addition, we are now seeing applications
of 3DOM materials that make use of multiple features of their architecture
at the same time. This Feature Article focuses on the different properties
of 3DOM materials that provide functionality, including a relatively
large surface area, the interconnectedness of the pores and the resulting
good accessibility of the internal surface, the nanostructured features
of the walls, the structural hierarchy and periodicity, well-defined
surface roughness, and relative mechanical robustness at low density.
It provides representative examples that illustrate the properties
of interest related to applications including energy storage and conversion
systems, sensors, catalysts, sorbents, photonics, actuators, and biomedical
materials or devices.