58 research outputs found

    On the possibility of extending the Nore-Frenkel generalized law of correspondent states to non-isotropic patchy interactions

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    Colloidal systems (and protein solutions) are often characterized by attractive interactions whose range is much smaller than the particle size. When this is the case and the interaction is spherical, systems obey a generalized law of correspondent states (GLCS), first proposed by Noro and Frenkel [ J.Chem.Phys. 113, 2941 (2000) ]. The thermodynamic properties become insensitive to the details of the potential, depending only on the value of the second virial coefficient B_2 and the density ρ\rho. The GLCS does not generically hold for the case of non-spherical potentials. In this Letter we suggest that when particles interact via short-ranged small-angular amplitude patchy interactions (so that the condition of only one bond per patch is fulfilled) it is still possible to generalize the GLCS close to the liquid-gas critical point. Keywords: Colloids, Second Virial Coefficient, Proteins interactions, Short-ranged attractive attractions.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication on J. Phys. Chem.

    Effective forces in square well and square shoulder fluids

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    We derive an analytical expression for the effective force between a pair of macrospheres immersed in a sea of microspheres, in the case where the interaction between the two unlike species is assumed to be a square well or a square shoulder of given range and depth (or height). This formula extends a similar one developed in the case of hard core interactions only. Qualitative features of such effective force and the resulting phase diagram are then analyzed in the limit of no interaction between the small particles. Approximate force profiles are then obtained by means of integral equation theories (PY and HNC) combined with the superposition approximation and compared with exact ones from direct Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 34 page

    Oscillatory athermal quasi-static deformation of a model glass

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    We report computer simulations of oscillatory athermal quasi-static shear deformation of dense amorphous samples of a three dimensional model glass former. A dynamical transition is observed as the amplitude of the deformation is varied: for large values of the amplitude the system exhibits diffusive behavior and loss of memory of the initial conditions, whereas localization is observed for small amplitudes. Our results suggest that the same kind of transition found in driven colloidal systems is present in the case of amorphous solids (e.g. metallic glasses). The onset of the transition is shown to be related to the onset of energy dissipation. Shear banding is observed for large system sizes, without, however, affecting qualitative aspects of the transition

    Enhanced tunneling conductivity induced by gelation of attractive colloids

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    We show that the formation of a gel by conducting colloidal particles leads to a dramatic enhancement in bulk conductivity, due to inter-particle electron tunneling, combining predictions from molecular dynamics simulations with structural measurements in an experimental colloid system. Our results show how colloidal gelation can be used as a general route to huge enhancements of conductivity, and suggest a feasible way for developing cheap materials with novel properties and low metal content.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 2 table

    A hard-sphere quasicrystal stabilized by configurational entropy

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    Due to their aperiodic nature, quasicrystals are one of the least understood phases in statistical physics. One significant complication they present in comparison to their periodic counterparts is the fact that any quasicrystal can be realized as an exponentially large number of different tilings, resulting in a significant contribution to the quasicrystal entropy. Here, we use free-energy calculations to demonstrate that it is this configurational entropy which stabilizes a dodecagonal quasicrystal in a binary mixture of hard spheres on a plane. Our calculations also allow us to quantitatively confirm that in this system all tiling realizations are essentially equally likely, with free-energy differences less than 0.0001kBTk_BT per particle -- an observation that could be the related to the observation of only random tilings in soft matter quasicrystals. Owing to the simplicity of the model and its available counterparts in colloidal experiments, we believe that this system is a excellent candidate to achieve the long-awaited quasicrystal self-assembly on the micron scale.Comment: Contains an SI as ancillary fil
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