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Molecular Physics
An International Journal at the Interface Between Chemistry and Physics
Volume 107, 2009 - Issue 4-6: A Special Issue in Honour of Professor Jean-Jacques Weis
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Invited Articles

How patchy can one get and still condense? The role of dissimilar patches in the interactions of colloidal particles

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Pages 453-466 | Received 29 Dec 2008, Accepted 26 Feb 2009, Published online: 04 Dec 2010
 

Abstract

We investigate the influence of strong directional, or bonding, interactions on the phase diagram of complex fluids, and in particular on the liquid–vapour critical point. To this end we revisit a simple model and theory for associating fluids which consist of spherical particles having a hard-core repulsion, complemented by three short-ranged attractive sites on the surface (sticky spots). Two of the spots are of type A and one is of type B; the interactions between each pair of spots have strengths , and . The theory is applied over the whole range of bonding strengths and results are interpreted in terms of the equilibrium cluster structures of the coexisting phases. In systems where unlike sites do not interact (i.e. where ), the critical point exists all the way to . By contrast, when , there is no critical point below a certain finite value of . These somewhat surprising results are rationalised in terms of the different network structures of the two systems: two long AA chains are linked by one BB bond (X-junction) in the former case, and by one AB bond (Y-junction) in the latter. The vapour–liquid transition may then be viewed as the condensation of these junctions and we find that X-junctions condense for any attractive (i.e. for any fraction of BB bonds), whereas condensation of the Y-junctions requires that be above a finite threshold (i.e. there must be a finite fraction of AB bonds).

Acknowledgements

Financial support from the Foundation of the University of Lisbon and the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) under Contracts nos. POCI/FIS/55592/2004 and POCTI/ISFL/2/618, is gratefully acknowledged.

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