Asymmetric Coulomb fluids at randomly charged dielectric interfaces: Anti-fragility, overcharging and charge inversion
Ali Naji, Malihe Ghodrat, Haniyeh Komaie-Moghaddam, Rudolf Podgornik

TL;DR
This paper investigates how quenched charge disorder on dielectric interfaces influences multivalent counterion distributions, revealing anti-fragility, overcharging, and charge inversion effects that significantly alter electrostatic interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive framework combining strong and weak coupling theories to analyze the impact of surface charge disorder on counterion behavior.
Findings
Charge disorder increases counterion density near the surface.
Disorder causes algebraic singularities in counterion profiles.
Enhanced charge inversion occurs at lower multivalent ion concentrations.
Abstract
We study the distribution of multivalent counterions next to a dielectric slab, bearing a quenched, random distribution of charges on one of its solution interfaces, with a given mean and variance, both in the absence and in the presence of a bathing monovalent salt solution. We use the previously derived approach based on the dressed multivalent-ion theory that combines aspects of the strong and weak coupling of multivalent and monovalent ions in a single framework. The presence of quenched charge disorder on the charged surface of the dielectric slab is shown to substantially increase the density of multivalent counterions in its vicinity. In the counterion-only model (with no monovalent salt ions), the surface disorder generates an additional logarithmic attraction potential and thus an algebraically singular counterion density profile at the surface. This behavior persists also in…
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