Effective forces in colloidal mixtures: From depletion attraction to accumulation repulsion

A. A. Louis, E. Allahyarov, H. Löwen, and R. Roth
Phys. Rev. E 65, 061407 – Published 13 June 2002
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Abstract

Computer simulations and theory are used to systematically investigate how the effective force between two big colloidal spheres in a sea of small spheres depends on the basic (big-small and small-small) interactions. The latter are modeled as hardcore pair potentials with a Yukawa tail which can be either repulsive or attractive. For a repulsive small-small interaction, the effective force follows the trends as predicted by a mapping onto an effective nonadditive hardcore mixture: both a depletion attraction and an accumulation repulsion caused by small spheres adsorbing onto the big ones can be obtained depending on the sign of the big-small interaction. For repulsive big-small interactions, the effect of adding a small-small attraction also follows the trends predicted by the mapping. But a more subtle “repulsion through attraction” effect arises when both big-small and small-small attractions occur: upon increasing the strength of the small-small interaction, the effective potential becomes more repulsive. We have further tested several theoretical methods against our computer simulations: The superposition approximation works best for an added big-small repulsion, and breaks down for a strong big-small attraction, while density functional theory is very accurate for any big-small interaction when the small particles are pure hard spheres. The theoretical methods perform most poorly for small-small attractions.

  • Received 15 February 2002

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.65.061407

©2002 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

A. A. Louis1, E. Allahyarov2, H. Löwen2, and R. Roth3

  • 1Department of Chemistry, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1EW, United Kingdom
  • 2Institut für Theoretische Physik II, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, D-40225 Düsseldorf, Germany
  • 3Max-Planck Institut für Metallforschung, Heisenbergstrasse 1, D-70569 Stuttgart, GermanyITAP, University of Stuttgart, Pfaffenwaldring 57, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany

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Issue

Vol. 65, Iss. 6 — June 2002

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