Critical Casimir effect in classical binary liquid mixtures
A. Gambassi, A. Maciolek, C. Hertlein, U. Nellen, L. Helden, C., Bechinger, S. Dietrich

TL;DR
This study measures critical Casimir forces in a binary liquid mixture near its critical point, demonstrating universal behavior and matching theoretical predictions with high precision.
Contribution
First direct measurement of critical Casimir forces in colloidal systems using TIRM, confirming theoretical predictions for sphere-plate geometry.
Findings
Attractive and repulsive forces observed near critical point
Quantitative agreement with theoretical models
Forces depend on boundary conditions and proximity to criticality
Abstract
If a fluctuating medium is confined, the ensuing perturbation of its fluctuation spectrum generates Casimir-like effective forces acting on its confining surfaces. Near a continuous phase transition of such a medium the corresponding order parameter fluctuations occur on all length scales and therefore close to the critical point this effect acquires a universal character, i.e., to a large extent it is independent of the microscopic details of the actual system. Accordingly it can be calculated theoretically by studying suitable representative model systems. We report on the direct measurement of critical Casimir forces by total internal reflection microscopy (TIRM), with femto-Newton resolution. The corresponding potentials are determined for individual colloidal particles floating above a substrate under the action of the critical thermal noise in the solvent medium, constituted by…
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