Hard spheres are an important benchmark of our understanding of natural and
synthetic systems. In this work, colloidal experiments and Monte Carlo
simulations examine the equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium assembly of hard
spheres of diameter σ within cylinders of diameter σ≤D≤2.82σ. Although in such a system phase transitions formally do not exist,
marked structural crossovers are observed. In simulations, we find that the
resulting pressure-diameter structural diagram echoes the densest packing
sequence obtained at infinite pressure in this range of D. We also observe
that the out-of-equilibrium self-assembly depends on the compression rate. Slow
compression approximates equilibrium results, while fast compression can skip
intermediate structures. Crossovers for which no continuous line-slip exists
are found to be dynamically unfavorable, which is the source of this
difference. Results from colloidal sedimentation experiments at high P\'eclet
number are found to be consistent with the results of fast compressions, as
long as appropriate boundary conditions are used. The similitude between
compression and sedimentation results suggests that the assembly pathway does
not here sensitively depend on the nature of the out-of-equilibrium dynamics.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures and 63 reference