128 research outputs found

    Lamellar and inverse micellar structures of skin lipids: Effect of templating

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    The outermost layer of skin, the stratum corneum (SC), comprises rigid corneocytes in a layered lipid matrix. Using atomistic simulations we find that the equilibrium phase of the SC lipids is inverse micellar. A model of the corneocyte is used to demonstrate that lamellar layering is induced by the patterned corneocyte wall. The inverse micellar phase is consistent with in vivo observations in the lacunar spaces and at the stratum granulosum - SC boundary region, and suggests a functional role in the lipid synthesis pathway in vivo.Comment: pdflatex 5 pages, 10 page supplementary material. Published Physical Review Letters. Added link to website with animation

    A Simple Model of Endemicity to Analyse Spread and Control of COVID-19 in India

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    A simple model based on 2 parameters, time-dependent infectability and efficacy of containment measures, is written to analyse the spread and containment of an endemic outbreak. Data from the first wave of the outbreak of COVID-19 in India is analysed. Interestingly, growth and decay of infections can be seen as a competition between the ratio of logarithm of infectability and the logarithm of time vis-a-vis the efficacy of containment measures imposed. Containment time estimates are shown to exhibit the viability of the simple model

    Laser induced reentrant freezing in two-dimensional attractive colloidal systems

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    The effects of an externally applied one-dimensional periodic potential on the freezing/melting behaviour of two-dimensional systems of colloidal particles with a short-range attractive interaction are studied using Monte Carlo simulations. In such systems, incommensuration results when the periodicity of the external potential does not match the length-scale at which the minimum of the attractive potential occurs. To study the effects of this incommensuration, we consider two different models for the system. Our simulations for both these models show the phenomenon of reentrant freezing as the strength of the periodic potential is varied. Our simulations also show that different exotic phases can form when the strength of the periodic potential is high, depending on the length-scale at which the minimum of the attractive pair-potential occurs.Comment: 24 pages (including figures) in preprint forma

    Bond-orientational ordering and shear rigidity in modulated colloidal liquids

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    From Landau-Alexander-McTague theory and Monte-Carlo simulation results we show that the modulated liquid obtained by subjecting a colloidal system to a periodic laser modulation has long range bond-orientational order and non-zero shear rigidity. From infinite field simulation results we show that in the modulated liquid phase, the translational order parameter correlation function decays to zero exponentially while the correlation function for the bond-orientational order saturates to a finite value at large distances.Comment: 8 pages, elsart documentclass, to be published in Physica A as part of proceedings for Stat-Phys 3, Calcutt

    Nano-scale mechanical probing of supported lipid bilayers with atomic force microscopy

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    We present theory and experiments for the force-distance curve F(z0)F(z_0) of an atomic force microscope (AFM) tip (radius RR) indenting a supported fluid bilayer (thickness 2d2d). For realistic conditions the force is dominated by the area compressibility modulus κA\kappa_A of the bilayer, and, to an excellent approximation, given by F=πκARz02/(2dz0)2F= \pi \kappa_A R z_0^2/(2d-z_0)^2. The experimental AFM force curves from coexisting liquid ordered and liquid disordered domains in 3-component lipid bilayers are well-described by our model, and provides κA\kappa_A in agreement with literature values. The liquid ordered phase has a yield like response that we model by hydrogen bond breaking.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Laser-induced freezing in 2-d colloids

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    Dielectric colloid particles prefer occupying the intensity maxima of an applied stationary interference pattern of laser beams. A 2-d system of colloidal liquid freezes to form a triangular lattice structure when the external laser modulation is in 1-d and the period of the intensity maxima is commensurate to that of the triangular lattice. In this article we review our recent simulation results on this phenomenon of laser-induced freezing
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