MetaParticles: Computationally engineered nanomaterials with tunable and responsive properties
Massimiliano Paesani, Ioana M. Ilie

TL;DR
This paper introduces MetaParticles, a flexible, deformable nanomaterial model that responds to stress with tunable properties, advancing the design of adaptive particles for biomedical and metamaterial applications.
Contribution
The paper presents a generic, simulation-based model for flexible, deformable particles called MetaParticles, which can respond to external stress with tunable mechanical properties.
Findings
MetaParticles exhibit elastomer-like stress response.
Deformation mechanisms vary with particle size and shape.
Simulations demonstrate size-dependent mechanical behavior.
Abstract
In simulations, particles are traditionally treated as rigid platforms with variable sizes, shapes and interaction parameters. While this representation is applicable for rigid core platforms, particles consisting of soft platforms (e.g. micelles, polymers, elastomers, lipids) inevitably deform upon application of external stress. We introduce a generic model for flexible particles which we call MetaParticles (MP). These particles have tunable properties, can respond to applied tension and can deform. A metaparticle is represented as a collection of Lennard-Jones beads interconnected by spring-like potentials. We model a series of metaparticles of variable sizes and symmetries, which we subject to external stress followed by relaxation upon stress release. The positions and the orientations of the individual beads are propagated by Brownian dynamics. The simulations show that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNanomaterials for catalytic reactions · Graphene and Nanomaterials Applications
