Phase behavior and structure of model colloid-polymer mixtures confined between two parallel planar walls
Andrea Fortini, Matthias Schmidt, and Marjolein Dijkstra

TL;DR
This study uses simulations and theory to explore how confinement between parallel walls affects phase separation in colloid-polymer mixtures, revealing shifts in phase boundaries and structural changes depending on wall permeability.
Contribution
It introduces a symmetric Kelvin equation for binary mixtures and compares its predictions with classical models, providing new insights into capillary phenomena in confined colloid-polymer systems.
Findings
Capillary binodal shifts depend on wall type, indicating condensation or evaporation.
The symmetric Kelvin equation accurately predicts capillary binodals away from critical points.
Density profiles show oscillations or flatness depending on wall permeability.
Abstract
Using Gibbs ensemble Monte Carlo simulations and density functional theory we investigate the fluid-fluid demixing transition in inhomogeneous colloid-polymer mixtures confined between two parallel plates with separation distances between one and ten colloid diameters covering the complete range from quasi two-dimensional to bulk-like behavior. We use the Asakura-Oosawa-Vrij model in which colloid-colloid and colloid-polymer interactions are hard-sphere like, whilst the pair potential between polymers vanishes. Two different types of confinement induced by a pair of parallel walls are considered, namely either through two hard walls or through two semi-permeable walls that repel colloids but allow polymers to freely penetrate. For hard (semi-permeable) walls we find that the capillary binodal is shifted towards higher (lower) polymer fugacities and lower (higher) colloid fugacities as…
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