Geometric background charge: dislocations on capillary bridges
William Irvine, Vincenzo Vitelli

TL;DR
This paper investigates how dislocations in colloidal crystals on curved surfaces relieve stress caused by Gaussian curvature, emphasizing the role of boundary effects and background charge in energetics.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework for understanding dislocation energetics on curved surfaces with free boundaries, highlighting the boundary's neutralizing effect.
Findings
Dislocations are energetically favored over disclinations for stress relief.
Boundary effects act as a background charge neutralizing curvature-induced stress.
Numerical simulations support the analytical predictions.
Abstract
Recent experiments have shown that colloidal crystals confined to weakly curved capillary bridges introduce groups of dislocations organized into `pleats' as means to relieve the stress caused by the Gaussian curvature of the surface. We consider the onset of this curvature-screening mechanism, by examining the energetics of isolated dislocations and interstitials on capillary bridges with free boundaries. The boundary provides an essential contribution to the problem, akin to a background charge that "neutralizes" the unbalanced integrated curvature of the surface. This makes it favorable for topologically neutral dislocations and groups of dislocations - rather than topologically charged disclinations and scars - to relieve the stress caused by the unbalanced gaussian curvature of the surface. This effect applies to any crystal on a surface with non-vanishing integrated Gaussian…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Material Dynamics and Properties · Electrostatics and Colloid Interactions
