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arxiv: 2008.13695 · v2 · pith:H6IB2FTK · submitted 2020-08-31 · cond-mat.soft

Soft particles at liquid interfaces: From molecular particle architecture to collective phase behavior

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classification cond-mat.soft
keywords phasebehaviorinterfacialparticlessoft-particlecollectiveframeworkaccount
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Soft particles such as microgels and core-shell particles can undergo significant and anisotropic deformations when adsorbed to a liquid interface. This, in turn, leads to a complex phase behavior upon compression. Here we develop a multiscale framework to rationally link the molecular particle architecture to the resulting interfacial morphology and, ultimately, to the collective interfacial phase behavior, enabling us to identify the key single-particle properties underlying two-dimensional continuous, heterostructural, and isostructural solid-solid transitions. Our approach resolves existing discrepancies between experiments and simulations and thus provides a unifying framework to describe phase transitions in interfacial soft-particle systems. We establish proof-of-principle for our rational approach by synthesizing three different poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) soft-particle architectures, each of which corresponds to a different targeted phase behavior. In parallel, we introduce a versatile and highly efficient coarse-grained simulation method that adequately captures the qualitative key features of each soft-particle system; the novel ingredient in our simulation model is the use of auxiliary degrees of freedom to explicitly account for the swelling and collapse of the particles as a function of surface pressure. Notably, these combined efforts allow us to establish the first experimental demonstration of a heterostructural transition to a chain phase in a single-component system, as well as the first accurate in silico account of the two-dimensional isostructural transition. Overall, our multiscale framework provides a bridge between physicochemical soft-particle characteristics at the molecular- and nanoscale and the collective self-assembly phenomenology at the macroscale, paving the way towards novel materials with on-demand interfacial behavior.

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