Coarse-Grained Modeling of Charged Colloidal Suspensions: From Poisson-Boltzmann Theory to Effective Interactions
Alan R. Denton

TL;DR
This paper reviews coarse-graining techniques to derive effective electrostatic interactions in charged colloidal suspensions, comparing Poisson-Boltzmann theory and perturbation approaches to simplify complex multicomponent systems.
Contribution
It introduces a practical manual for implementing coarse-graining methods to obtain effective interactions, including a perturbation theory approach as an alternative to the cell model.
Findings
Derived effective electrostatic interactions using linear response approximation.
Compared Poisson-Boltzmann and perturbation theory implementations.
Provided a systematic approach for simplifying complex colloidal systems.
Abstract
Electrostatic interactions between macroions largely govern the equilibrium thermodynamic and dynamical properties of charge-stabilized colloidal suspensions and polyelectrolyte solutions. Predicting the properties of such complex, multicomponent systems with accuracy sufficient to guide and interpret experiments requires realistic modeling of the interparticle interactions and collective behavior of many-particle systems. While the fundamental interactions may be simple, the sheer number of particles and the broad ranges of length and time scales confront the modeler with significant computational challenges. A general strategy for mitigating such challenges is to "coarse grain" or "integrate out" the degrees of freedom of some components, reducing the original multicomponent model to a simpler model of fewer components. The trade-off for so reducing complexity is that the simpler…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrostatics and Colloid Interactions · Material Dynamics and Properties · Blood properties and coagulation
