108 research outputs found
Numerical modelling of non-ionic microgels: an overview
Microgels are complex macromolecules. These colloid-sized polymer networks
possess internal degrees of freedom and, depending on the polymer(s) they are
made of, can acquire a responsiveness to variations of the environment
(temperature, pH, salt concentration, etc.). Besides being valuable for many
practical applications, microgels are also extremely important to tackle
fundamental physics problems. As a result, these last years have seen a rapid
development of protocols for the synthesis of microgels, and more and more
research has been devoted to the investigation of their bulk properties.
However, from a numerical standpoint the picture is more fragmented, as the
inherently multi-scale nature of microgels, whose bulk behaviour crucially
depends on the microscopic details, cannot be handled at a single level of
coarse-graining. Here we present an overview of the methods and models that
have been proposed to describe non-ionic microgels at different length-scales,
from the atomistic to the single-particle level. We especially focus on
monomer-resolved models, as these have the right level of details to capture
the most important properties of microgels, responsiveness and softness. We
suggest that these microscopic descriptions, if realistic enough, can be
employed as starting points to develop the more coarse-grained representations
required to investigate the behaviour of bulk suspensions
Tuning effective interactions close to the critical point in colloidal suspensions
We report a numerical investigation of two colloids immersed in a critical
solvent, with the aim of quantifying the effective colloid-colloid interaction
potential. By turning on an attraction between the colloid and the solvent
particles we follow the evolution from the case in which the solvent density
close to the colloids changes from values smaller than the bulk to values
larger than the bulk. We thus effectively implement the so-called and
boundary conditions defined in field theoretical approaches focused on
the description of critical Casimir forces. We find that the effective
potential at large distances decays exponentially, with a characteristic decay
length compatible with the bulk critical correlation length, in full agreement
with theoretical predictions. We also investigate the case of boundary
condition, where the effective potential becomes repulsive. Our study provides
a guidance for a design of the interaction potential which can be exploited to
control the stability of colloidal systems
Crystal-to-crystal transition of ultrasoft colloids under shear
Ultrasoft colloids typically do not spontaneously crystallize, but rather
vitrify, at high concentrations. Combining in-situ rheo-SANS experiments and
numerical simulations we show that shear facilitates crystallization of
colloidal star polymers in the vicinity of their glass transition. With
increasing shear rate well beyond rheological yielding, a transition is found
from an initial bcc-dominated structure to an fcc-dominated one. This
crystal-to-crystal transition is not accompanied by intermediate melting but
occurs via a sudden reorganization of the crystal structure. Our results
provide a new avenue to tailor colloidal crystallization and crystal-to-crystal
transition at molecular level by coupling softness and shear
Tuning the rheological behavior of colloidal gels through competing interactions
We study colloidal gels formed by competing electrostatic repulsion and short-range attraction by means of extensive numerical simulations under external shear. We show that, upon varying the repulsion strength, the gel structure and its viscoelastic properties can be largely tuned. In particular, the gel fractal dimension can be either increased or decreased with respect to mechanical equilibrium conditions. Unexpectedly, gels with stronger repulsion, despite being mechanically stiffer, are found to be less viscous with respect to purely attractive ones. We provide a microscopic explanation of these findings in terms of the influence of an underlying phase separation. Our results allow for the design of colloidal gels with desired structure and viscoelastic response by means of additional electrostatic interactions, easily controllable in experiments
Charge affinity and solvent effects in numerical simulations of ionic microgels
Ionic microgel particles are intriguing systems in which the properties of
thermo-responsive polymeric colloids are enriched by the presence of charged
groups. In order to rationalize their properties and predict the behaviour of
microgel suspensions, it is necessary to develop a coarse-graining strategy
that starts from the accurate modelling of single particles. Here, we provide a
numerical advancement of a recently-introduced model for charged co-polymerized
microgels by improving the treatment of ionic groups in the polymer network. We
investigate the thermoresponsive properties of the particles, in particular
their swelling behaviour and structure, finding that, when charged groups are
considered to be hydrophilic at all temperatures, highly charged microgels do
not achieve a fully collapsed state, in favorable comparison to experiments. In
addition, we explicitly include the solvent in the description and put forward
a mapping between the solvophobic potential in the absence of the solvent and
the monomer-solvent interactions in its presence, which is found to work very
accurately for any charge fraction of the microgel. Our work paves the way for
comparing single-particle properties and swelling behaviour of ionic microgels
to experiments and to tackle the study of these charged soft particles at a
liquid-liquid interface.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
Pressure-energy correlations in liquids. II. Analysis and consequences
We present an analysis and discuss consequences of the strong correlations of
the configurational parts of pressure and energy in their equilibrium
fluctuations at fixed volume reported for simulations of several liquids in the
companion paper [arXiv:0807.0550]. The analysis concentrates specifically on
the single-component Lennard-Jones system. We demonstrate that the potential
may be replaced, at fixed volume, by an effective power-law, but not because
only short distance encounters dominate the fluctuations. Indeed, contributions
to the fluctuations are associated with the whole first peak of the RDF, as we
demonstrate by an analysis of the spatially resolved covariance matrix. The
reason the effective power-law works so well depends on going beyond
single-pair effects and on the constraint of fixed volume. In particular, a
better approximation to the potential includes a linear term, which contributes
to the mean values of potential energy and virial, but not to their
fluctuations. We also study the T=0 limit of the crystalline phase, where the
correlation coefficient becomes very close, but not equal, to unity. We then
consider four consequences of strong pressure-energy correlations: (1)
analyzing experimental data for supercritical Ar we find 96% correlation; (2)
we discuss the significance acquired by the correlations for viscous van der
Waals liquids approaching the glass transition: For strongly correlating
viscous liquids knowledge of just one of the eight frequency-dependent
thermoviscoelastic response functions basically implies knowledge of them all;
(3) we re-interpret aging simulations of ortho-terphenyl carried out by Mossa
{\it et al.} in 2002, showing their conclusions follow from the strongly
correlating property; and (4) we discuss correlations in model biomembranes.Comment: Some changes corresponding to those made in the proof of the accepted
articl
Isomorphs in model molecular liquids
Isomorphs are curves in the phase diagram along which a number of static and
dynamic quantities are invariant in reduced units. A liquid has good isomorphs
if and only if it is strongly correlating, i.e., the equilibrium
virial/potential energy fluctuations are more than 90% correlated in the NVT
ensemble. This paper generalizes isomorphs to liquids composed of rigid
molecules and study the isomorphs of two systems of small rigid molecules, the
asymmetric dumbbell model and the Lewis-Wahnstrom OTP model. In particular, for
both systems we find that the isochoric heat capacity, the excess entropy, the
reduced molecular center-of-mass self part of the intermediate scattering
function, the reduced molecular center-of-mass radial distribution function to
a good approximation are invariant along an isomorph. In agreement with theory,
we also find that an instantaneous change of temperature and density from an
equilibrated state point to another isomorphic state point leads to no
relaxation. The isomorphs of the Lewis-Wahnstrom OTP model were found to be
more approximative than those of the asymmetric dumbbell model, which is
consistent with the OTP model being less strongly correlating. For both models
we find "master isomorphs", i.e., isomorphs have identical shape in the
virial/potential energy phase diagram.Comment: 20 page
Pressure-energy correlations in liquids. I. Results from computer simulations
We show that a number of model liquids at fixed volume exhibit strong
correlations between equilibrium fluctuations of the configurational parts of
(instantaneous) pressure and energy. We present detailed results for thirteen
systems, showing in which systems these correlations are significant. These
include Lennard-Jones liquids (both single- and two-component) and several
other simple liquids, but not hydrogen-bonding liquids like methanol and water,
nor the Dzugutov liquid which has significant contributions to pressure at the
second nearest neighbor distance. The pressure-energy correlations, which for
the Lennard-Jones case are shown to also be present in the crystal and glass
phases, reflect an effective inverse power-law potential dominating
fluctuations, even at zero and slightly negative pressure. An exception to the
inverse-power law explanation is a liquid with hard-sphere repulsion and a
square-well attractive part, where a strong correlation is observed, but only
after time-averaging. The companion paper [arXiv:0807.0551] gives a thorough
analysis of the correlations, with a focus on the Lennard-Jones liquid, and a
discussion of some experimental and theoretical consequences.Comment: Some changes corresponding to those made in proof of the accepted
articl
Volume-energy correlations in the slow degrees of freedom of computer-simulated phospholipid membranes
Constant-pressure molecular-dynamics simulations of phospholipid membranes in
the fluid phase reveal strong correlations between equilibrium fluctuations of
volume and energy on the nanosecond time-scale. The existence of strong
volume-energy correlations was previously deduced indirectly by Heimburg from
experiments focusing on the phase transition between the fluid and the ordered
gel phases. The correlations, which are reported here for three different
membranes (DMPC, DMPS-Na, and DMPSH), have volume-energy correlation
coefficients ranging from 0.81 to 0.89. The DMPC membrane was studied at two
temperatures showing that the correlation coefficient increases as the phase
transition is approached
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