Non-analytic curvature contributions to solvation free energies: influence of drying
R. Evans, J.R. Henderson, and R. Roth

TL;DR
This paper studies how the curvature of a spherical cavity affects solvation free energies near the liquid-gas coexistence, revealing non-analytic behavior due to drying phenomena, supported by theoretical and microscopic calculations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the non-analytic curvature dependence of solvation free energies near drying transitions, extending classical curvature expansion theories.
Findings
Identification of a critical length scale R_c for drying effects
Discovery of logarithmic R dependence in interfacial free energy for R<R_c
Validation of theoretical predictions with microscopic density functional results
Abstract
We investigate the solvation of a hard spherical cavity, of radius , immersed in a fluid for which the interparticle forces are short ranged. For thermodynamic states lying close to the liquid binodal, where the chemical potential deviation is very small and positive, complete wetting by gas (drying) occurs and two regimes of interfacial behavior can be identified. These are characterized by the length scale , where is the planar gas-liquid surface tension and is the difference in coexisting densities at temperature . For , the interfacial free energy and the density profile of the fluid near the hard wall can be expanded in powers of the curvature , in keeping with the analysis of Stillinger and Cotter, J. Chem. Phys. {\bf 55}, 3449 (1971). In…
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