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Dynamic arrest in colloidal systems: from glasses to gels Francesco Sciortino Email: francesco.sciortino@phys.uniroma1.it Titolo !
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collaboratori Outline Routes to gelation in colloidal systems. Hard-Sphere Glasses Attractive Glasses Phase-separation driven gels (D. Weitz) Competing Interactions arrested states Equilibrium Gels
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Colloids….. Greek for Glue…. Nano and micromiter sized particles dispersed in a solvent (proteins….. ) From a physicist point of view… Effective interactions ….. Super-atoms with designed interactions…. Realization of theoretical models (hard-spheres). Test for integral equations approaches. Size comparable to light wavelength… (confocal microscopy)
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Colloids: Possibility to control the Interparticle interactions Chemistry (surface) Physic Processes (solvent modulation, polydispersity, Depletions) r r r Design Potenziale Hard Sphere Asakura- Oosawa Yukawa + + + + - - - In this talk !
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The simplest colloids: hard spheres: Entropy at work Single control parameter: packing fraction 0.490.540.58 glasscrystal (FCC) fluid+crystal Pusey & Van Megen Nature 1986 V(r)
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Signatures of the slowing down of the dynamics (with packing…. or with T) - The log-scale
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van Megen and S.M. Underwood Phys. Rev. Lett. 70, 2766 (1993) HS e MCT (t) HS (slow) dynamics
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. Two time scales: The Cage Effect (in HS). Explanation of the cage and analysis of correlation function Rattling in the cage Cage changes log(t) (t) Non ergodicity parameter f q Order parameter of the transition
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Mean square displacement (in the glass) The MSD in HS log(t) (0.1 ) 2 MSD Localizzation length
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Equazioni MCT ! Equazioni base della MCT
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van Megen and S.M. Underwood Phys. Rev. Lett. 70, 2766 (1993) HS e MCT (t) HS (slow) dynamics
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MCT --- Comparison “simulation” and “theory” for Binary HS Foffi et al Phys. Rev. E 69, 011505, 2004 A =1 B =0.6 Giuseppe e Thomas 1/ l
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The effect of short-range attraction on the Phase Diagram hard spheres large range short range Anderson and Lekkerkerker, Nature 2001
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Depletion Interactions Depletion Interactions: V(r) r
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What if …. Hard Spheres Potential Square-Well short range attractive Potential Can the localization length be controlled in a different way ? What if we add a short-range attraction ? Attractive Glass lowering T
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Log(t) Mean squared displacement repulsive attractive (0.1 ) 2 Figure 1 di Natmat A model with two different localization lengths How does the system change from one confinement to the other ?
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The MCT predictions for short-range attractive square well MCT predictions for short range attractive square-well hard-sphere glass (repulsive) Short-range attractive glass fluid Type B A3A3 Fluid-Glass on cooling and heating !! Controlled by Fabbian et al PRE R1347 (1999) Bergenholtz and Fuchs, PRE 59 5708 (1999)
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Non ergodicity parameters for the two glasses MCT Predictions: Wavevector dependence of the non ergodicity parameter (plateau) along the glass line Fabbian et al PRE R1347 (1999) Bergenholtz and Fuchs, PRE 59 5708 (1999)
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Funzioni di correlazione Comparing simulation and theory in the A4-region
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Science Pham et al Fig 1 Temperature Glass samples Fluid samples MCT fluid- glass line
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Barsh PRL (phi effect) Temperature Colloidal-Polymer Mixture with Re-entrant Glass Transition in a Depletion Interactions T. Eckert and E. Bartsch Phys.Rev. Lett. 89 125701 (2002)
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Arrest phenomena in short-range potentials Competition between excluded volume caging and bond caging
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foffi Adding “gels” in the picture: Joining thermodynamics and dynamics information What are the possible scenarios ?
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Nature, in press For HS+attraction, arrest at low (gelation) is the result of a phase separation process interrupted by the glass transition CONFOCAL IMAGES (THE REAL STUFF!)
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Gels resulting from arrested phase separation (interrupted by the glass transition) arrested dense phase quench Scenario 1): Non-equilibrium route to gelation
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How to go to low T at low (in metastable equilibrium) reducing “valence” How to suppress phase separation ? Competing interactions
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The quest for the ideal (thermoreversible) gel….model 1) Long Living reversible bonds 2)No Phase Separation (No Crystallization) Are 1 and 2 mutually exclusive ? LowTemperature Phase-separation Long Bond Lifetime
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How to stay at low T without phase-separating ? Reasons for separation: (Frank, Hill, Coniglio) Physical Clusters at low T if the infinite cluster (the liquid state !) is the lowest (free)energy state How to make the surface as stable as the bulk (or more)?
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Attraction and Repulsion (Yukawa)
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Short Range Attraction, --dominant in small clusters Longer Range Repulsion Competition Between Short Range Attraction and longer Range Repulsion: Role in the clustering Importance of the short-range attraction: Only nn interactions
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Cluster Ground State: Attraction and Repulsion Vanishing of !
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A=8 =0.5 A=0.05 =2 Typical shapes in the ground state
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Size dependence of the cluster shape “Linear” shape is an “attractor”
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bartlett
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ground state clusters: energy per particle the attractive case
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T=0.15T=0.10 MD simulation
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Shurtemberger Proteins as colloids…
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Scenario 2): equilibrium route to gelation with long-range repulsion equilibrium gelation
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How to go to low T at low (in metastable equilibrium) reducing “valence” How to suppress phase separation ? Competing interactions
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DNA functionalized particles: modulating the interaction
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patchy colloids - colloidal molecules Hard-Core (gray spheres); Short-range Square-Well (gold patchy sites) Self-Organization of Bidisperse Colloids in Water Droplets Cho et al J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005 127, p. 15968
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Phase- Diagram -- valence depencence Wertheim Empty liquids ! Cooling the liquids without phase separating! Bianchi et al, PRL 2006
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Phase Diagram - Theory and Simulations
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Phase diagram of a small valence system (exact description) Flory-Stockmayer cluster size distributions observed arrest line
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A snapshot of =2.025 N 3 =330 N 2 =5670 T=0.05, =0.01 An “empty liquid” configuration
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Scenario 3): equilibrium route to gelation with patches
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One last connection… atomic and molecular networks…. Physical Gels Network forming liquids Silica Water
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Summary: routes to gels arrested phase separation: non-equilibrium route Equilibrium routes to gelation: with long-range repulsion / with patches Zaccarelli, JPCM 19, 323101 (2007)
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In collaboration with…… Piero Tartaglia Emanuela Zaccarelli Ivan Saika-Voivod (now Canada) Emanuela Bianchi Julio Largo (now Spain) Angel Moreno (now Spain) Stefano Mossa (now France ESRF) Sergey Buldyrev (New York)
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Conclusions…. (open questions) Glass-glass transitions Empty liquids Competing interactions Network-forming liquids --- equilibrium gels (no Kauzmann) Self-assembly and network formation (loops) Surface geometry (Janus particles)
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Role of T and : On cooling (or on increasing attraction), monomers tend to cluster…. From isolated to interacting clusters In the region of the phase diagram where the attractive potential would generate a phase separation….repulsion slows down (or stop) aggregation. The range of the attractive interactions plays a role. How do clusters interact ?
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How do “spherical” clusters interact ? How do cluster interact
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Yukawa Phase Diagram bcc fcc bcc 3 /6 n
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N=1 Description of the flow in the Yukawa model 3 /6 n
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N=2 3 /6 n
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N=4 3 /6 n
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N=8 3 /6 n
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N=16 3 /6 n
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N=32 3 /6 n
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N=64 3 /6 n
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Yukawa Phase Diagram 3 /6 n
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lowering T Increasing packing fraction Figure gel yukawa Tc=0.23 n=100
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