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1.
We report a joint simulation and theoretical study of the liquid-vapor phase behavior of a fluid in which polydispersity in the particle size couples to the strength of the interparticle interactions. Attention is focused on the case in which the particle diameters are distributed according to a fixed Schulz form with degree of polydispersity delta = 14%. The coexistence properties of this model are studied using grand canonical ensemble Monte Carlo simulations and moment free energy calculations. We obtain the cloud and shadow curves as well as the daughter phase density distributions and fractional volumes along selected isothermal dilution lines. In contrast to the case of size-independent interaction [N. B. Wilding et al., J. Chem. Phys. 121, 6887 (2004)], the cloud and shadow curves are found to be well separated, with the critical point lying significantly below the cloud curve maximum. For densities below the critical value, we observe that the phase behavior is highly sensitive to the choice of upper cutoff on the particle size distribution. We elucidate the origins of this effect in terms of extremely pronounced fractionation effects and discuss the likely appearance of new phases in the limit of very large values of the cutoff.  相似文献   

2.
The structural properties of polydisperse hard spheres in the presence of a hard wall are investigated via Monte Carlo simulation and density functional theory (DFT). Attention is focused on the local density distribution rho(sigma,z), measuring the number density of particles of diameter sigma at a distance z from the wall. Estimates of rho(sigma,z) are obtained for bulk volume fractions eta(b)=0.2 and eta(b)=0.4, and for two choices of the bulk parent distribution: a top-hat form, which we study for degrees of polydispersity delta=11.5% and delta=40.4%, and a truncated Schulz form having delta=40.7%. Excellent overall agreement is found between the DFT and simulation results, particularly at eta(b)=0.2. A detailed analysis of rho(sigma,z) confirms the presence of oscillatory size segregation effects, as observed in a previous DFT study [I. Pagonabarraga, M. E. Cates, and G. J. Ackland, Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 911 (2000)]. For large delta, the character of these oscillation is observed to depend strongly on the shape of the parent distribution. In the vicinity of the wall, attractive sigma-dependent depletion interactions are found to greatly enhance the density of the largest particles. The local degree of polydispersity delta(z) is suppressed in this region, while further from the wall it exhibits oscillations.  相似文献   

3.
The statistical mechanics of phase transitions in dense systems of polydisperse particles presents distinctive challenges to computer simulation and analytical theory alike. The core difficulty, namely, dealing correctly with particle size fractionation between coexisting phases, is set out in the context of a critique of previous simulation work on such systems. Specialized Monte Carlo simulation techniques and moment free energy method calculations, capable of treating fractionation exactly, are then described and deployed to study the fluid-solid transition of an assembly of repulsive spherical particles described by a top-hat "parent" distribution of particle sizes. The cloud curve delineating the solid-fluid coexistence region is mapped as a function of the degree of polydispersity δ, and the properties of the incipient "shadow" phases are presented. The coexistence region is found to shift to higher densities as δ increases, but does not exhibit the sharp narrowing predicted by many theories and some simulations.  相似文献   

4.
A method is presented for the calculation of cloud-point curves of polymer–polymer mixtures when the polymers involved are polydisperse. The method is based on the Flory–Huggins free energy of mixing with a concentration-independent χ parameter. Numerical results are given for cases in which the molecular weight distributions are represented by the Schulz–Flory type. When the two polymers have similar average molecular weights and polydispersities, the cloud-point curves become flatter as the polydispersity increases. When the two polymers have similar average molecular weights but differ in polydispersity, the cloud-point curves become more skewed as the difference in the polydispersity increases. The results point out that, if the polydispersity effect is not properly accounted for, the value of χ deduced from experimental cloud points is liable to be in error, especially with regard to its temperature coefficient and its concentration dependence.  相似文献   

5.
Cloud-point curves, critical points, and coexistence curves with feed concentrations close to the critical concentration were measured in three systems involving cyclohexane + different polydisperse polystyrenes. The shape of the coexistence curves is analyzed by using a scaling expression. In two systems the critical exponent β possesses values somewhat larger than in actual binary systems (where β ≈ 1/3), whereas in the third system a somewhat smaller value is found. By using a three-parameter Gibbs free energy relation, cloud-point curves and coexistence curves are calculated from the critical point data and from the slope of the cloud-point curve at this point. To account for polydispersity, the method of continuous thermodynamics is applied. The cloud-point curves are well described, but the prediction of the coexistence curves is bad due to the mean-field character of the Gibbs free energy relation resulting in β = 1/2. Hence, the often used practice of fitting the parameters of a mean-field Gibbs free energy relation to the critical point and to some cloud points and then to calculate the coexistence data is to be considered with great care.  相似文献   

6.
Computer simulations are employed to obtain subcritical isotherms of small finite sized systems inside the coexistence region. For all temperatures considered, ranging from the triple point up to the critical point, the isotherms gradually developed a sequence of sharp discontinuities as the system size increased from approximately 8 to approximately 21 molecular diameters. For the smallest system sizes, and more so close to the critical point, the isotherms appeared smooth, resembling the continuous van der Waals loop obtained from extrapolation of an analytic equation of state outside the coexistence region. As the system size was increased, isotherms in the chemical potential-density plane developed first two, then four, and finally six discontinuities. Visual inspection of selected snapshots revealed that the observed discontinuities are related to structural transitions between droplets (on the vapor side) and bubbles (on the liquid side) of spherical, cylindrical, and tetragonal shapes. A capillary drop model was developed to qualitatively rationalize these observations. Analytic results were obtained and found to be in full agreement with the computer simulation results. The analysis shows that the shape of the subcritical isotherms is dictated by a single characteristic volume (or length scale), which depends on the surface tension, compressibility, and coexistence densities. For small reduced system volumes, the model predicts that a homogeneous fluid is stable across the whole coexistence region, thus explaining the continuous van der Waals isotherms observed in the simulations. When the liquid and vapor free energies are described by means of an accurate mean-field equation of state and surface tensions from simulation are employed, the capillary model is found to describe the simulated isotherms accurately, especially for large systems (i.e., larger than about 15 molecular diameters) at low temperature (lower than about 0.85 times the critical temperature). This implies that the Laplace pressure differences can be predicted for drops as small as five molecular diameters, and as few as about 500 molecules. The theoretical study also shows that the extrema or apparent spinodal points of the finite size loops are more closely related to (finite system size) bubble and dew points than to classical spinodals. Our results are of relevance to phase transitions in nanopores and show that first order corrections to nucleation energies in finite closed systems are power laws of the inverse volume.  相似文献   

7.
We report a simulation study of the gas-liquid critical point for the square-well potential, for values of well width delta as small as 0.005 times the particle diameter sigma. For small delta, the reduced second virial coefficient at the critical point B2*c is found to depend linearly on delta. The observed weak linear dependence is not sufficient to produce any significant observable effect if the critical temperature Tc is estimated via a constant B2*c assumption, due to the highly nonlinear transformation between B2*c and Tc. This explains the previously observed validity of the law of corresponding states. The critical density rho c is also found to be constant when measured in units of the cube of the average distance between two bonded particles (1+0.5 delta)sigma. The possibility of describing the delta-->0 dependence with precise functional forms provides improved accurate estimates of the critical parameters of the adhesive hard-sphere model.  相似文献   

8.
Grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations are used to explore the metastable fluid-fluid coexistence curve of the modified Lennard-Jones model of globular proteins of ten Wolde and Frenkel [Science, 277, 1975 (1997)]. Using both mixed-field finite-size scaling and histogram-reweighting methods, the joint distribution of density and energy fluctuations is analyzed at coexistence to accurately determine the critical-point parameters. The subcritical coexistence region is explored using the recently developed hyper parallel tempering Monte Carlo simulation method along with histogram reweighting to obtain the density distributions. The phase diagram for the metastable fluid-fluid coexistence curve is calculated in close proximity to the critical point, a region previously unattained by simulations.  相似文献   

9.
Vapor-liquid coexistence in fluids of charged hard dumbbells, each made up of two oppositely charged hard spheres with diameters sigma and separation d, has been studied using grand-canonical Monte Carlo simulations. In the limit d/sigma-->0, and with the temperature scaled accordingly, the system corresponds to dipolar hard spheres. For separations in the range 0.30 yield estimates of the apparent critical parameters for dipolar hard spheres.  相似文献   

10.
Polymers are naturally polydisperse. Polydispersity may have a large effect on the phase behavior of polymer solutions, in particular, on the liquid-liquid phase equilibria. In this paper, we determine the cloud and shadow curves bounded by lower critical solution temperatures for a number of polymer+solvent systems where the polymer is polydisperse in terms of molecular weight (chain length). The moment method [P. Sollich, P. B. Warren, and M. E. Cates, Adv. Chem. Phys. 116, 265 (2001)] is applied with the SAFT approach to determine cloud and shadow curves with continuous Schulz-Flory distributions. It is seen that chain length polydispersity always enhances the extent of liquid-liquid phase equilibria. The predicted cloud curves obtained for continuous distributions are very similar to those obtained for simple ternary mixtures with the same polydispersity index, while the corresponding shadow curves can be very different depending on the composition of the parent distribution. The ternary phase behavior can be used to provide an understanding of the shape of the cloud and shadow curves. Regions of phase equilibria between three liquid phases are found for ternary systems when the chain length distribution is very asymmetrical; such regions are not observed for Schulz-Flory distributions even in the case of a large degree of polydispersity.  相似文献   

11.
We study the effects of size polydispersity on the gas-liquid phase behavior of mixtures of sticky hard spheres. To achieve this, the system of coupled quadratic equations for the contact values of the partial cavity functions of the Percus-Yevick solution [R. J. Baxter, J. Chem. Phys. 49, 2770 (1968)] is solved within a perturbation expansion in the polydispersity, i.e., the normalized width of the size distribution. This allows us to make predictions for various thermodynamic quantities which can be tested against numerical simulations and experiments. In particular, we determine the leading order effects of size polydispersity on the cloud curve delimiting the region of two-phase coexistence and on the associated shadow curve; we also study the extent of size fractionation between the coexisting phases. Different choices for the size dependence of the adhesion strengths are examined carefully; the Asakura-Oosawa model [J. Chem. Phys. 22, 1255 (1954)] of a mixture of polydisperse colloids and small polymers is studied as a specific example.  相似文献   

12.
Monte Carlo simulations were performed on semiflexible polymer chains with the goal of delineating their isotropic-nematic (IN) and gas-liquid coexistence envelopes. The chain monomers are spherical beads that interact via a square-well potential with all other beads. Bonded beads are connected by strings chosen so that bond length varies between 1.01sigma and 1.05sigma (where sigma is the hard sphere diameter). The stiffness of the molecules is controlled via a potential between beads separated by two bonds; this potential restricts the distance between these beads to be between 2.02sigma and 2.1sigma. The vapor-liquid coexistence and IN coexistence curves are obtained using computer simulations. An IN transition is found for 10相似文献   

13.
The vapor-liquid coexistence boundaries of fluids composed of particles interacting with highly directional patchy interactions, in addition to an isotropic square well potential, are evaluated using grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations combined with the histogram reweighting and finite size scaling methods. We are motivated to study this more complicated model for two reasons. First, it is established that the reduced widths of the metastable vapor-liquid coexistence curve predicted by a model with only isotropic interparticle interactions are much too narrow when compared to the experimental phase behavior of protein solutions. Second, interprotein interactions are well known to be "patchy." Our results show that at a constant total areal density of patches, the critical temperature and the critical density increase monotonically with an increasing number of uniformly spaced patches. The vapor-liquid coexistence curves plotted in reduced coordinates (i.e., the temperature and the density scaled by their respective critical values) are found to be effectively independent of the number of patches, but are much broader than those found for the isotropic models. Our findings for the reduced width of the coexistence curve are almost in quantitative agreement with the available experimental data for protein solutions, stressing the importance of patchiness in this context.  相似文献   

14.
The Gibbs free energies and equations of state of polymers with special molar mass distributions, e.g., Flory distribution, uniform distribution and Schulz distribution, are derived based on a lattice fluid model. The influence of the polydispersity (or the chain length) on the close-packed mass density, the close-packed volume of a mer and the mer-mer interaction energy or the scaling temperature is discussed. The diagrams of the Gibbs free energies as a function of temperature and chain length are simulated with a computer. The results suggest that a polydisperse polymer is thermodynamically more stable than the corresponding monodisperse polymer and that the thermodynamical properties of a polydisperse polymer are identical with those of the corresponding monodisperse polymer when the average degree of polymerization is sufficiently high.  相似文献   

15.
In this paper, we investigate the effects of using inverse analyses developed for monodisperse particles to extract particle-particle and particle-surface potentials from simulated interfacial colloidal configurations having finite-size polydispersity. Forward Monte Carlo simulations are used to generate three-dimensional equilibrium configurations of log normal-distributed polydisperse particles confined by gravity near an underlying surface. Particles remain levitated above the substrate and stabilized against aggregation by repulsive electrostatic Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek pair potentials. An inverse Ornstein-Zernike analysis and an inverse Monte Carlo simulation method are used to obtain interactions from simulated distribution functions as a function of polydispersity (sigma), relative range of repulsion (kappa a), and projected interfacial concentration (rho). Both inverse analyses successfully recover input potentials for all monodisperse cases, but fail for polydispersities often encountered in experiments. For different conditions (sigma, kappa a, and rho), our results indicate softened short-range repulsion, anomalous long-range attraction, and apparent particle overlaps, which are similar to commonly reported observations in optical microscopy measurements of quasi-two-dimensional interfacial colloidal ensembles. By demonstrating signatures of, and limitations due to, polydispersity when extracting pair potentials from measured distribution functions, our specific goal is to provide a basis to objectively interpret and resolve the effects of polydispersity in optical microscopy experiments.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The liquid-gas transition of an electroneutral mixture of oppositely charged colloids, studied by Monte Carlo simulations, is found in the low-temperature-low-density region. The critical temperature shows a nonmonotonous behavior as a function of the interaction range, kappa(-1), with a maximum at kappasigma approximately 10, implying an island of coexistence in the kappa-rho plane. The system is arranged in such a way that each particle is surrounded by shells of particles with alternating charge. In contrast with the electrolyte primitive model, both neutral and charged clusters are obtained in the vapor phase.  相似文献   

18.
The paper reports a Monte Carlo technique for estimation of the free energies of fluids by sampling on distributions designed for this purpose, rather than on the usual Boltzmann distribution. As an illustration of its use, the free energy of a Lennard-Jones fluid in the liquid-vapour coexistence region has been estimated by relating it to that of the inverse-twelve (soft sphere) fluid, which itself shows no condensation.  相似文献   

19.
We study theoretically the equilibrium phase behavior of a mixture of polydisperse hard-sphere colloids and monodisperse polymers, modeled using the Asakura-Oosawa model [S. Asakura and F. Oosawa, J. Chem. Phys. 22, 1255 (1954)] within the free volume approximation of H. N. W. Lekkerkerker, W. C. K. Poon, P. N. Pusey, A. Stroobants, and P. B. Warren [Europhys. Lett. 20, 559 (1992)]. We compute full phase diagrams in the plane of colloid and polymer volume fractions, using the moment free energy method. The intricate features of phase separation in pure polydisperse colloids combine with the appearance of polymer-induced gas-liquid coexistence to give a rich variety of phase diagram topologies as the polymer-colloid size ratio xi and the colloid polydispersity delta are varied. Quantitatively, we find that polydispersity disfavors fluid-solid against gas-liquid separation, causing a substantial lowering of the threshold value xi(c) above which stable two-phase gas-liquid coexistence appears. Phase splits involving two or more solids can occur already at low colloid concentration, where they may be kinetically accessible. We also analyze the strength of colloidal size fractionation. When a solid phase separates from a fluid, its polydispersity is reduced most strongly if the phase separation takes place at low colloid concentration and high polymer concentration, in agreement with experimental observations. For fractionation in gas-liquid coexistence we likewise find good agreement with experiment, as well as with perturbative theories for near-monodisperse systems.  相似文献   

20.
The authors present a model describing the coexistence of hydrophobic association and phase separation with lower critical solution temperature (LCST) in aqueous solutions of polymers carrying short hydrophobic chains at both chain ends (telechelic associating polymers). The LCST of these solutions is found to decrease along the sol/gel transition curve as a result of both end-chain association (association-induced phase separation) and direct hydrophobic interaction of the end chains with water. The authors relate the magnitude of the LCST decrease to a hydration cooperativity parameter sigma. The LCST decreases substantially (approximately 100 K) in the case of random hydration (sigma=1), whereas only a small shift (approximately 5-10 K) occurs in the case of cooperative hydration (sigma=0.3). The molecular weight dependence of the LCST drop is studied in detail in each case. The results are compared with experimental observations of the cloud points of telechelic poly(ethylene oxide) solutions, in which random hydration predominates, and of telechelic poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) solutions, in which cooperative hydration prevails.  相似文献   

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