1,581 research outputs found

    Dynamics of a thin liquid film with surface rigidity and spontaneous curvature

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    The effect of rigid surfaces on the dynamics of thin liquid films which are amenable to the lubrication approximation is considered. It is shown that the Helfrich energy of the layer gives rise to additional terms in the time-evolution equations of the liquid film. The dynamics is found to depend on the absolute value of the spontaneous curvature, irrespective of its sign. Due to the additional terms, a novel finite wavelength instability of flat rigid interfaces can be observed. Furthermore, the dependence of the shape of a droplet on the bending rigidity as well as on the spontaneous curvature is discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Effect of dipolar moments in domain sizes of lipid bilayers and monolayers

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    Lipid domains are found in systems such as multi-component bilayer membranes and single component monolayers at the air-water interface. It was shown by Andelman et al. (Comptes Rendus 301, 675 (1985)) and McConnell et al. (Phys. Chem. {\bf 91}, 6417 (1987)) that in monolayers, the size of the domains results from balancing the line tension, which favors the formation of a large single circular domain, against the electrostatic cost of assembling the dipolar moments of the lipids. In this paper, we present an exact analytical expression for the electric potential, ion distribution and electrostatic free energy for different problems consisting of three different slabs with different dielectric constants and Debye lengths, with a circular homogeneous dipolar density in the middle slab. From these solutions, we extend the calculation of domain sizes for monolayers to include the effects of finite ionic strength, dielectric discontinuities (or image charges) and the polarizability of the dipoles and further generalize the calculations to account for domains in lipid bilayers. In monolayers, the size of the domains is dependent on the different dielectric constants but independent of ionic strength. In asymmetric bilayers, where the inner and outer leaflets have different dipolar densities, domains show a strong size dependence with ionic strength, with molecular-sized domains that grow to macroscopic phase separation with increasing ionic strength. We discuss the implications of the results for experiments and briefly consider their relation to other two dimensional systems such as Wigner crystals or heteroepitaxial growth.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figues in eps Replaced with new version, one citation added and a few statements corrected. The results of the paper are unchange

    Statistical mechanics of a colloidal suspension in contact with a fluctuating membrane

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    Surface effects are generally prevailing in confined colloidal systems. Here we report on dispersed nanoparticles close to a fluid membrane. Exact results regarding the static organization are derived for a dilute solution of non-adhesive colloids. It is shown that thermal fluctuations of the membrane broaden the density profile, but on average colloids are neither accumulated nor depleted near the surface. The radial correlation function is also evaluated, from which we obtain the effective pair-potential between colloids. This entropically-driven interaction shares many similarities with the familiar depletion interaction. It is shown to be always attractive with range controlled by the membrane correlation length. The depth of the potential well is comparable to the thermal energy, but depends only indirectly upon membrane rigidity. Consequenses for stability of the suspension are also discussed

    Universal reduction of pressure between charged surfaces by long-wavelength surface charge modulation

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    We predict theoretically that long-wavelength surface charge modulations universally reduce the pressure between the charged surfaces with counterions compared with the case of uniformly charged surfaces with the same average surface charge density. The physical origin of this effect is the fact that surface charge modulations always lead to enhanced counterion localization near the surfaces, and hence, fewer charges at the midplane. We confirm the last prediction with Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 8 pages 1 figure, Europhys. Lett., in pres

    Surface-mediated attraction between colloids

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    We investigate the equilibrium properties of a colloidal solution in contact with a soft interface. As a result of symmetry breaking, surface effects are generally prevailing in confined colloidal systems. In this Letter, particular emphasis is given to surface fluctuations and their consequences on the local (re)organization of the suspension. It is shown that particles experience a significant effective interaction in the vicinity of the interface. This potential of mean force is always attractive, with range controlled by the surface correlation length. We suggest that, under some circumstances, surface-induced attraction may have a strong influence on the local particle distribution

    The lamellar-to-isotropic transition in ternary amphiphilic systems

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    We study the dependence of the phase behavior of ternary amphiphilic systems on composition and temperature. Our analysis is based on a curvature elastic model of the surfactant film with sufficiently large spontaneous curvature and sufficiently negative saddle-splay modulus that the stable phases are the lamellar phase and a droplet microemulsion. In addition to the curvature energy, we consider the contributions to the free energy of the long-ranged van der Waals interaction and of the undulation modes. We find that for bending rigidities of order k_B T, the lamellar phase extends further and further into the water apex of the phase diagram as the phase inversion temperature is approached, in good agreement with experimental results.Comment: LaTeX2e, 11 pages with references and 2 eps figures included, submitted to Europhys. Let

    Main phase transition in lipid bilayers: phase coexistence and line tension in a soft, solvent-free, coarse-grained model

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    We devise a soft, solvent-free, coarse-grained model for lipid bilayer membranes. The non-bonded interactions take the form of a weighted-density functional which allows us to describe the thermodynamics of self-assembly and packing effects of the coarse-grained beads in terms of a density expansion of the equation of state and the weighting functions that regularize the microscopic bead densities, respectively. Identifying the length and energy scales via the bilayer thickness and the thermal energy scale, kT, the model qualitatively reproduces key characteristics (e.g., bending rigidity, area per lipid molecules, and compressibility) of lipid membranes. We employ this model to study the main phase transition between the liquid and the gel phase of the bilayer membrane. We accurately locate the phase coexistence using free energy calculations and also obtain estimates for the bare and the thermodynamic line tension.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures. Submitted to J. Chem. Phy

    Title Stabilization of Membrane Pores by Packing

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    We present a model for pore stabilization in membranes without surface tension. Whereas an isolated pore is always unstable (since it either shrinks tending to re-seal or grows without bound til to membrane disintegration), it is shown that excluded volume interactions in a system of many pores can stabilize individual pores of a given size in a certain range of model parameters. For such a multipore membrane system, the distribution of pore size and associated pore lifetime are calculated within the mean field approximation. We predict that, above certain temperature when the effective line tension becomes negative, the membrane exhibits a dynamic sieve-like porous structure.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Shape of a liquid front upon dewetting

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    We examine the profile of a liquid front of a film that is dewetting a solid substrate. Since volume is conserved, the material that once covered the substrate is accumulated in a rim close to the three phase contact line. Theoretically, such a profile of a Newtonian liquid resembles an exponentially decaying harmonic oscillation that relaxes into the prepared film thickness. For the first time, we were able to observe this behavior experimentally. A non-Newtonian liquid - a polymer melt - however, behaves differently. Here, viscoelastic properties come into play. We will demonstrate that by analyzing the shape of the rim profile. On a nm scale, we gain access to the rheology of a non-Newtonian liquid.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Exact solution of a one-dimensional continuum percolation model

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    I consider a one dimensional system of particles which interact through a hard core of diameter \si and can connect to each other if they are closer than a distance dd. The mean cluster size increases as a function of the density ρ\rho until it diverges at some critical density, the percolation threshold. This system can be mapped onto an off-lattice generalization of the Potts model which I have called the Potts fluid, and in this way, the mean cluster size, pair connectedness and percolation probability can be calculated exactly. The mean cluster size is S = 2 \exp[ \rho (d -\si)/(1 - \rho \si)] - 1 and diverges only at the close packing density \rho_{cp} = 1 / \si . This is confirmed by the behavior of the percolation probability. These results should help in judging the effectiveness of approximations or simulation methods before they are applied to higher dimensions.Comment: 21 pages, Late
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