Microphase separation versus the vapor-liquid transition in systems of spherical particles

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Abstract

The conditions, i.e., the interparticle potentials, for which vapor-liquid coexistence is supplanted by microphase separation are examined. The liquid phase is found for potentials with a steeply repulsive core and an attraction of not-too-short a range. To this potential we add a repulsion of longer range than the attraction and find that it breaks up and mixes coexisting bulk vapor and liquid to form a single microphase-separated phase. Our spherical particles are perhaps the simplest continuum model to show a Lifshitz point and microphase separation. In the microphase-separated phase the density is modulated with a period typically ten times the size of the particle's core. Microphase separation, apart from providing a rich and interesting phase behavior, may have a potential use in nanoelectronic applications. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.

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Sear, R. P., & Gelbart, W. M. (1999). Microphase separation versus the vapor-liquid transition in systems of spherical particles. Journal of Chemical Physics, 110(9), 4582–4588. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.478338

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