Abstract
The structural characteristics during phase separation of a model colloidal system were investigated using Brownian dynamics simulation. The structures that formed were analysed using the radial distribution function and structure factor in separate time periods after the quench. The data were interpreted in terms of scale-invariancy and density inhomogeneities. The systems, which consisted of a gas-like phase and dense liquid or solid-like regions, developed with a highly interconnected morphology during the simulations. The aggregate morphology was sensitive to the range of the attractive part of the potential and the position in the phase diagram after the quench. The long-range 12:6 potential induced compact structures with thick filaments, whereas the systems generated using the shorter-ranged 24:12 and 36:18 potentials persisted in a more diffuse network and also evolved more slowly with time. The fractal dimensions were quite high, typically close to 3. The 24:12 and 36:18 potential systems developed regions of local crystalline order which formed contemporaneously with the more global morphological changes. In contrast, at low temperatures the particles of the longer-range 12:6 potential became trapped in glass-like states during the course of the morphological changes in the system. The value of the characteristic lengthscale with time exponent, α, was found to be dependent on the temperature, density and interaction potential and therefore cannot be described as ‘universal’.