Zigzag transitions and nonequilibrium pattern formation in colloidal chains
Arthur V. Straube, Roel P. A. Dullens, Lutz Schimansky-Geier, Ard A., Louis

TL;DR
This paper investigates how paramagnetic colloidal chains form zigzag patterns under magnetic fields and how these patterns evolve when traps are turned off, revealing insights into nonequilibrium pattern formation and stability.
Contribution
The study provides an analytical framework explaining the transition to zigzag patterns in colloidal chains, including effects of trap anharmonicity and magnetic interactions.
Findings
Zigzag patterns form even below the equilibrium transition threshold.
Anharmonic traps can destabilize the zigzag state above a critical anharmonicity.
Mode analysis shows zigzag symmetry mode is the first to become unstable.
Abstract
Paramagnetic colloidal particles that are optically trapped in a linear array can form a zigzag pattern when an external magnetic field induces repulsive interparticle interactions. When the traps are abruptly turned off, the particles form a nonequilibrium expanding pattern with a zigzag symmetry, even when the strength of the magnetic interaction is weaker than that required to break the linear symmetry of the equilibrium state. We show that the transition to the equilibrium zigzag state is always potentially possible for purely harmonic traps. For anharmonic traps that have a finite height, the equilibrium zigzag state becomes unstable above a critical anharmonicity. A normal mode analysis of the equilibrium line configuration demonstrates that increasing the magnetic field leads to a hardening and softening of the spring constants in the longitudinal and transverse directions,…
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