Continuum Percolation of Polydisperse Rods in Quadrupole Fields: Theory and Simulations
Shari P. Finner, Mihail I. Kotsev, Mark A. Miller, Paul van der Schoot

TL;DR
This paper combines theory and simulations to analyze how external quadrupole fields influence percolation thresholds in polydisperse nanorod mixtures, revealing that fields alter the universal scaling and can lower percolation thresholds.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical model showing how quadrupolar fields modify percolation thresholds in polydisperse nanorods, extending understanding beyond the inverse weight average scaling.
Findings
Quadrupolar fields increase the percolation threshold.
The universal inverse weight average scaling no longer applies under fields.
Percolation thresholds can be lower in mixtures than in individual components.
Abstract
We investigate percolation in mixtures of nanorods in the presence of external fields that align or disalign the particles with the field axis. Such conditions are found in the formulation and processing of nanocomposites, where the field may be electric, magnetic, or due to elongational flow. Our focus is on the effect of length polydispersity, which -- in the absence of a field -- is known to produce a percolation threshold that scales with the inverse weight average of the particle length. Using a model of non-interacting spherocylinders in conjunction with connectedness percolation theory, we show that a quadrupolar field always increases the percolation threshold and that the universal scaling with the inverse weight average no longer holds if the field couples to the particle length. Instead, the percolation threshold becomes a function of higher moments of the length…
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