It is of great technological interest to control the organization of nanoparticles (NPs) into functional devices that can make use of NP’s properties not found in the bulk form of the solid material. To this end, a major scientific challenge is to further elucidate inter-particle forces that govern spontaneous self-assembly processes in liquid suspensions. Liquid-phase electron microscopy (LPEM) can resolve morphological details of small objects in μm-thick liquid layers with nanometer resolution. The goal of this doctoral thesis has been to develop LPEM towards directly visualizing colloidal self-assembly processes in aqueous suspensions. As a model system, we used a colloidal binary system in which positively charged 30 nm nanoparticles (...