The solvation force of a simple fluid confined between identical planar walls
is studied in two model systems with short ranged fluid-fluid interactions and
long ranged wall-fluid potentials decaying as −Az−p,z→∞, for
various values of p. Results for the Ising spins system are obtained in two
dimensions at vanishing bulk magnetic field h=0 by means of the
density-matrix renormalization-group method; results for the truncated
Lennard-Jones (LJ) fluid are obtained within the nonlocal density functional
theory. At low temperatures the solvation force fsolv for the Ising film
is repulsive and decays for large wall separations L in the same fashion as
the boundary field fsolv∼L−p, whereas for temperatures larger than
the bulk critical temperature fsolv is attractive and the asymptotic decay
is fsolv∼L−(p+1). For the LJ fluid system fsolv is always
repulsive away from the critical region and decays for large L with the the
same power law as the wall-fluid potential. We discuss the influence of the
critical Casimir effect and of capillary condensation on the behaviour of the
solvation force.Comment: 48 pages, 12 figure