Litcius/Paper detail

Phase behavior of a binary mixture of patchy colloids: Effect of particle size and gravity

Rodrigo Braz Teixeira, Daniel de las Heras, J. M. Tavares, M. M. Telo da Gama

2021The Journal of Chemical Physics17 citationsDOI

Abstract

We study theoretically the effect of size difference and that of gravity in the phase behavior of a binary mixture of patchy particles. The species, 2A and 3B, have two A and three B patches, respectively, and only bonds between patches A and B (AB bonds) are allowed. This model describes colloidal systems where the aggregation of particles (3B) is mediated and controlled by a second species, the linkers (2A) to which they bind strongly. Thermodynamic calculations are performed using Wertheim's perturbation theory with a hard sphere reference term that accounts for the difference in the size of the two species. Percolation lines are determined employing a generalized Flory-Stockmayer theory, and the effects of gravity are included through a local density approximation. The bulk phase diagrams are calculated, and all the stacking sequences generated in the presence of gravity are determined and classified in a stacking diagram. The relative size of the particles can be used to control the phase behavior of the mixture. An increase in the size of particles 3B, relative to the size of the linkers 2A, is found to promote mixing while keeping the percolating structures and, in certain cases, leads to changes in the stacking sequence under gravity.

Topics & Concepts

StackingPhase diagramColloidBinary numberParticle sizePhase (matter)Materials sciencePerturbation theory (quantum mechanics)Particle (ecology)Mixing (physics)Chemical physicsThermodynamicsHard spheresMolecular physicsChemistryStatistical physicsPhysicsMathematicsPhysical chemistryQuantum mechanicsGeologyOrganic chemistryArithmeticOceanographyPickering emulsions and particle stabilizationSurfactants and Colloidal SystemsMaterial Dynamics and Properties