Nonlinear effects in charge stabilized colloidal suspensions
T. Kreer, J. Horbach, A. Chatterji (Institute of Physics, University, of Mainz, Germany)

TL;DR
This study uses Molecular Dynamics simulations to explore nonlinear effects in highly charged colloidal suspensions at low salt concentrations, revealing limitations of classical theories and identifying triplet interactions.
Contribution
It demonstrates the significance of nonlinear effects beyond charge renormalization in isolated macroion systems and characterizes triplet interactions in colloidal suspensions.
Findings
Nonlinear effects are relevant for highly charged macroions.
Charge renormalization does not fully describe the system.
Triplet interactions can be attractive at small separations.
Abstract
Molecular Dynamics simulations are used to study the effective interactions in charged stabilized colloidal suspensions. For not too high macroion charges and sufficiently large screening, the concept of the potential of mean force is known to work well. In the present work, we focus on highly charged macroions in the limit of low salt concentrations. Within this regime, nonlinear corrections to the celebrated DLVO theory [B. Derjaguin and L. Landau, Acta Physicochem. USSR {\bf 14}, 633 (1941); E.J.W. Verwey and J.T.G. Overbeck, {\em Theory of the Stability of Lyotropic Colloids} (Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1948)] have to be considered. For non--bulklike systems, such as isolated pairs or triples of macroions, we show, that nonlinear effects can become relevant, which cannot be described by the charge renormalization concept [S. Alexander et al., J. Chem. Phys. {\bf 80}, 5776 (1984)]. For an…
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