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arxiv: 1503.03262 · v1 · pith:EIX5ICL3new · submitted 2015-03-11 · ❄️ cond-mat.soft · cond-mat.stat-mech· physics.chem-ph

Effective interactions between a pair of nanoparticles

classification ❄️ cond-mat.soft cond-mat.stat-mechphysics.chem-ph
keywords nanoparticleseffectivephasewettingalphainducedpotentialseparation
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We investigate the effective interactions between two nanoparticles (or colloids) immersed in a solvent exhibiting two-phase separation. Using a non-local density functional theory, we determine the dependence of the effective potential on the separation of the nanoparticles when the solvent is near bulk two-phase coexistence. If identical nanoparticles preferentially adsorbing phase $\alpha$ are inserted into phase $\beta$, thick wetting layers of the preferable phase $\alpha$ develop at their surfaces. At some particular separation $h_b$ of the nanoparticles, the wetting layers connect to form a single bridge, and the induced effective potential becomes strongly attractive for all distances $h<h_b$. The bridging is a first order capillary condensation like transition for all radii of the nanoparticles greater than the critical radius $R_c$, the value of which was estimated to be approximately $R_c\approx20\sigma$ for a temperature $T/T_c\approx0.9$, where $\sigma$ is the size of the solvent (square-well) particles. For radii $R<R_c$ the process of bridging is continuous. If the same particles are inserted into the preferable phase $\alpha$, the only effective interaction between them is induced by the short-ranged depletion potential. If the nanoparticles have opposite adsorption preferences, only a single wetting layer forms around one of the nanoparticles and the effective interaction is strongly repulsive in both phases. The repulsion, induced by a disruption of the wetting film by the presence of the second particle, is larger and slightly longer-ranged in a low density state.

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