1,766 research outputs found
How to derive and parameterize effective potentials in colloid-polymer mixtures
Polymer chains in colloid-polymer mixtures can be coarse-grained by replacing
them with single soft particles interacting via effective polymer-polymer and
polymer-colloid pair potentials. Here we describe in detail how
Ornstein-Zernike inversion techniques, originally developed for atomic and
molecular fluids, can be generalized to complex fluids and used to derive
effective potentials from computer simulations on a microscopic level. In
particular, we consider polymer solutions for which we derive effective
potentials between the centers of mass, and also between mid-points or
end-points from simulations of self-avoiding walk polymers. In addition, we
derive effective potentials for polymers near a hard wall or a hard sphere. We
emphasize the importance of including both structural and thermodynamic
information (through sum-rules) from the underlying simulations. In addition we
develop a simple numerical scheme to optimize the parameterization of the
density dependent polymer-polymer, polymer-wall and polymer-sphere potentials
for dilute and semi-dilute polymer densities, thus opening up the possibility
of performing large-scale simulations of colloid-polymer mixtures. The methods
developed here should be applicable to a much wider range effective potentials
in complex fluids.Comment: uses revtex4.cls; submitted for archival purpose
Many-body interactions and correlations in coarse-grained descriptions of polymer solutions
We calculate the two, three, four, and five-body (state independent)
effective potentials between the centers of mass (CM) of self avoiding walk
polymers by Monte-Carlo simulations. For full overlap, these coarse-grained
n-body interactions oscillate in sign as (-1)^n, and decrease in absolute
magnitude with increasing n. We find semi-quantitative agreement with a scaling
theory, and use this to discuss how the coarse-grained free energy converges
when expanded to arbitrary order in the many-body potentials. We also derive
effective {\em density dependent} 2-body potentials which exactly reproduce the
pair-correlations between the CM of the self avoiding walk polymers. The
density dependence of these pair potentials can be largely understood from the
effects of the {\em density independent} 3-body potential. Triplet correlations
between the CM of the polymers are surprisingly well, but not exactly,
described by our coarse-grained effective pair potential picture. In fact, we
demonstrate that a pair-potential cannot simultaneously reproduce the two and
three body correlations in a system with many-body interactions. However, the
deviations that do occur in our system are very small, and can be explained by
the direct influence of 3-body potentials.Comment: 11 pages, 1 table, 9 figures, RevTeX (revtex.cls
The Asakura-Oosawa model in the protein limit: the role of many-body interactions
We study the Asakura-Oosawa model in the "protein limit", where the
penetrable sphere radius is much greater than the hard sphere radius
. The phase behaviour and structure calculated with a full many-body
treatment show important qualitative differences when compared to a description
based on pair potentials alone. The overall effect of the many-body
interactions is repulsive.Comment: 9 pages and 11 figures, submitted to J. Phys.: Condensed Matter,
special issue "Effective many-body interactions and correlations in soft
matter
Evaluation of effect of the primary particle size on compactibility of spray-dried lactoses
Spray-dried lactose is one of the most used filler-binders in direct compaction of tablets.
Spray-dried lactose is produced by spray-drying a suspension of α-lactose monohydrate
crystals in a saturated aqueous solution of lactoses. The resulting product is composed of
spherical particles, containing 80-85% crystals of α-lactose monohydrate (primary particles) and 15-20% amorphous lactose
The compactibility of two commercial spray-dried lactoses, Pharmatose® DCL 11
(DCL11), prepared from α-lactose monohydrate with a median primary particle size of 34
µm and a new product, Pharmatose® DCL 14 (DCL14), prepared from 20 µm primary
particles, were investigated
Coarse-graining polymers as soft colloids
We show how to coarse grain polymers in a good solvent as single particles,
interacting with density-independent or density-dependent interactions. These
interactions can be between the centres of mass, the mid-points or end-points
of the polymers. We also show how to extend these methods to polymers in poor
solvents and mixtures of polymers. Treating polymers as soft colloids can
greatly speed up the simulation of complex many-polymer systems, including
polymer-colloid mixtures.Comment: to appear in Physica A, special STATPHYS 2001 edition. Content of
invited talk by AA
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