69 research outputs found
Phase behaviour of colloidal assemblies on 2D corrugated substrates
We investigate - with Monte Carlo computer simulations - the phase behaviour
of dimeric colloidal molecules on periodic substrates with square symmetry. The
molecules are formed in a two-dimensional suspension of like charged colloids
subject to periodic external confinement, which can be experimentally realized
by optical methods. We study the evolution of positional and orientational
order by varying the temperature across the melting transition. We propose and
evaluate appropriate order parameters as well as the specific heat capacity and
show that the decay of positional correlations belongs to a class of crossover
transitions while the orientational melting is a second-order phase transition.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted in J. Phys.: Condens. Matte
Observation of condensed phases of quasi-planar core-softened colloids
We experimentally study the condensed phases of repelling core-softened
spheres in two dimensions. The dipolar pair repulsion between superparamagnetic
spheres trapped in a thin cell is induced by a transverse magnetic field and
softened by suitably adjusting the cell thickness. We scan a broad density
range and we materialize a large part of the theoretically predicted phases in
systems of core-softened particles, including expanded and close-packed
hexagonal, square, chain-like, stripe/labyrinthine, and honeycomb phase.
Further insight into their structure is provided by Monte Carlo simulations
Effect of many-body interactions on the solid-liquid phase-behavior of charge-stabilized colloidal suspensions
The solid-liquid phase-diagram of charge-stabilized colloidal suspensions is
calculated using a technique that combines a continuous Poisson-Boltzmann
description for the microscopic electrolyte ions with a molecular-dynamics
simulation for the macroionic colloidal spheres. While correlations between the
microions are neglected in this approach, many-body interactions between the
colloids are fully included. The solid-liquid transition is determined at a
high colloid volume fraction where many-body interactions are expected to be
strong. With a view to the Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek theory predicting
that colloids interact via Yukawa pair-potentials, we compare our results with
the phase diagram of a simple Yukawa liquid. Good agreement is found at high
salt conditions, while at low ionic strength considerable deviations are
observed. By calculating effective colloid-colloid pair-interactions it is
demonstrated that these differences are due to many-body interactions. We
suggest a density-dependent pair-potential in the form of a truncated Yukawa
potential, and show that it offers a considerably improved description of the
solid-liquid phase-behavior of concentrated colloidal suspensions
Nanoparticle ordering in sandwiched polymer brushes
The organization of nano-particles inside grafted polymer layers is governed
by the interplay of polymer-induced entropic interactions and the action of
externally applied fields. Earlier work had shown that strong external forces
can drive the formation of colloidal structures in polymer brushes. Here we
show that external fields are not essential to obtain such colloidal patterns:
we report Monte Carlo and Molecular dynamics simulations that demonstrate that
ordered structures can be achieved by compressing a `sandwich' of two grafted
polymer layers, or by squeezing a coated nanotube, with nano-particles in
between. We show that the pattern formation can be efficiently controlled by
the applied pressure, while the characteristic length--scale, i.e. the typical
width of the patterns, is sensitive to the length of the polymers. Based on the
results of the simulations, we derive an approximate equation of state for
nano-sandwiches.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Poisson -- Boltzmann Brownian Dynamics of Charged Colloids in Suspension
We describe a method to simulate the dynamics of charged colloidal particles
suspended in a liquid containing dissociated ions and salt ions. Regimes of
prime current interest are those of large volume fraction of colloids, highly
charged particles and low salt concentrations. A description which is tractable
under these conditions is obtained by treating the small dissociated and salt
ions as continuous fields, while keeping the colloidal macroions as discrete
particles. For each spatial configuration of the macroions, the electrostatic
potential arising from all charges in the system is determined by solving the
nonlinear Poisson--Boltzmann equation. From the electrostatic potential, the
forces acting on the macroions are calculated and used in a Brownian dynamics
simulation to obtain the motion of the latter. The method is validated by
comparison to known results in a parameter regime where the effective
interaction between the macroions is of a pairwise Yukawa form
On the macroion virial contribution to the osmotic pressure in charge-stabilized colloidal suspensions
Our interest goes to the different virial contributions to the equation of
state of charged colloidal suspensions. Neglect of surface effects in the
computation of the colloidal virial term leads to spurious and paradoxical
results. This pitfall is one of the several facets of the danger of a naive
implementation of the so called One Component Model, where the micro-ionic
degrees of freedom are integrated out to only keep in the description the
mesoscopic (colloidal) degrees of freedom. On the other hand, due incorporation
of wall induced forces dissolves the paradox brought forth in the naive
approach, provides a consistent description, and confirms that for salt-free
systems, the colloidal contribution to the pressure is dominated by the
micro-ionic one. Much emphasis is put on the no salt case but the situation
with added electrolyte is also discussed
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Bonding interactions between ligand-decorated colloidal particles
<p>We study the interactions between particles that form reversible bonds. Theoretically, we find that the mean association constant between a pair of such particles can be well approximated by a double exponential function of the individual bond free energy when at least one of the following conditions holds: (i) when the individual bond strength is sufficiently weak and (ii) when the bond-forming ligands are randomly (Poisson) distributed among the particles in the system. In experiments with ligand-grafted colloidal particles, randomness in both the number of the ligands per colloid and the spatial distribution on the colloid is inherent to common fabrication techniques. We theoretically investigate the effect of quenched disordered ligand positions on interaction heterogeneity. Furthermore, we perform Monte Carlo simulations of colloidal particles decorated with mobile, quenched disordered, or uniformly distributed ligands to investigate the extent to which the mean association constant is a good approximation for the magnitude of the effective interactions in such systems, and to define the limits of applicability of the double exponential expression. We find that for large enough particles (100 nm–1 µm in diameter) at usual experimental parameters, the simple analytical expression provides a good description of the inter-particle interactions. The theory is finally extended beyond dimeric bonds to general multimeric complexes.</p
Testing the relevance of effective interaction potentials between highly charged colloids in suspension
Combining cell and Jellium model mean-field approaches, Monte Carlo together
with integral equation techniques, and finally more demanding many-colloid
mean-field computations, we investigate the thermodynamic behavior, pressure
and compressibility of highly charged colloidal dispersions, and at a more
microscopic level, the force distribution acting on the colloids. The
Kirkwood-Buff identity provides a useful probe to challenge the
self-consistency of an approximate effective screened Coulomb (Yukawa)
potential between colloids. Two effective parameter models are put to the test:
cell against renormalized Jellium models
Pseudo-Casimir force in confined nematic polymers
We investigate the pseudo-Casimir force in a slab of material composed of
nematically ordered long polymers. We write the total mesoscopic energy
together with the constraint connecting the local density and director
fluctuations and evaluate the corresponding fluctuation free energy by standard
methods. It leads to a pseudo-Casimir force of a different type than in the
case of standard, short molecule nematic. We investigate its separation
dependence and its magnitude and explicitly derive the relevant limiting cases.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
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