1,425 research outputs found

    How to derive and parameterize effective potentials in colloid-polymer mixtures

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    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

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    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

    Density functional theory for colloidal mixtures of hard platelets, rods, and spheres

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    A geometry-based density functional theory is presented for mixtures of hard spheres, hard needles and hard platelets; both the needles and the platelets are taken to be of vanishing thickness. Geometrical weight functions that are characteristic for each species are given and it is shown how convolutions of pairs of weight functions recover each Mayer bond of the ternary mixture and hence ensure the correct second virial expansion of the excess free energy functional. The case of sphere-platelet overlap relies on the same approximation as does Rosenfeld's functional for strictly two-dimensional hard disks. We explicitly control contributions to the excess free energy that are of third order in density. Analytic expressions relevant for the application of the theory to states with planar translational and cylindrical rotational symmetry, e.g. to describe behavior at planar smooth walls, are given. For binary sphere-platelet mixtures, in the appropriate limit of small platelet densities, the theory differs from that used in a recent treatment [L. Harnau and S. Dietrich, Phys. Rev. E 71, 011504 (2004)]. As a test case of our approach we consider the isotropic-nematic bulk transition of pure hard platelets, which we find to be weakly first order, with values for the coexistence densities and the nematic order parameter that compare well with simulation results.Comment: 39 pages, 8 figure

    Density profiles and surface tensions of polymers near colloidal surfaces

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    The surface tension of interacting polymers in a good solvent is calculated theoretically and by computer simulations for a planar wall geometry and for the insertion of a single colloidal hard-sphere. This is achieved for the planar wall and for the larger spheres by an adsorption method, and for smaller spheres by a direct insertion technique. Results for the dilute and semi-dilute regimes are compared to results for ideal polymers, the Asakura-Oosawa penetrable-sphere model, and to integral equations, scaling and renormalization group theories. The largest relative changes with density are found in the dilute regime, so that theories based on non-interacting polymers rapidly break down. A recently developed ``soft colloid'' approach to polymer-colloid mixtures is shown to correctly describe the one-body insertion free-energy and the related surface tension

    Coarse-graining polymers as soft colloids

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    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

    The Asakura-Oosawa model in the protein limit: the role of many-body interactions

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    We study the Asakura-Oosawa model in the "protein limit", where the penetrable sphere radius RAOR_{AO} is much greater than the hard sphere radius RcR_c. 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

    Accurate effective pair potentials for polymer solutions

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    Dilute or semi-dilute solutions of non-intersecting self-avoiding walk (SAW) polymer chains are mapped onto a fluid of ``soft'' particles interacting via an effective pair potential between their centers of mass. This mapping is achieved by inverting the pair distribution function of the centers of mass of the original polymer chains, using integral equation techniques from the theory of simple fluids. The resulting effective pair potential is finite at all distances, has a range of the order of the radius of gyration, and turns out to be only moderately concentration-dependent. The dependence of the effective potential on polymer length is analyzed in an effort to extract the scaling limit. The effective potential is used to derive the osmotic equation of state, which is compared to simulation data for the full SAW segment model, and to the predictions of renormalization group calculations. A similar inversion procedure is used to derive an effective wall-polymer potential from the center of mass density profiles near the wall, obtained from simulations of the full polymer segment model. The resulting wall-polymer potential turns out to depend strongly on bulk polymer concentration when polymer-polymer correlations are taken into account, leading to a considerable enhancement of the effective repulsion with increasing concentration. The effective polymer-polymer and wall-polymer potentials are combined to calculate the depletion interaction induced by SAW polymers between two walls. The calculated depletion interaction agrees well with the ``exact'' results from much more computer-intensive direct simulation of the full polymer-segment model, and clearly illustrates the inadequacy -- in the semi-dilute regime -- of the standard Asakura-Oosawa approximation based on the assumption of non-interacting polymer coils.Comment: 18 pages, 24 figures, ReVTeX, submitted to J. Chem. Phy

    Refinement of the crystal structure of caesium dichloride

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    CslC12, trigonal, space group R'3m with a= 5.469 (2) A, ~ = 70.67 (3) °, Z= 1. The atomic positions have been determined by least-squares refinement of counter intensities, the final R being 0.031 for 256 reflexions. The I-CI bond length is 2.548 A
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