We examine the phase behaviour of colloidal suspensions of hard board-like particles (HBPs) as a function of their shape anisotropy, and observe a fascinating spectrum of nematic, smectic, and columnar liquid-crystalline phases, whose formation is entirely driven by excluded volume effects. We map out the phase diagram of short and long HBPs by gradually modifying their shape from prolate to oblate and investigate the long-range order of the resulting morphologies along the phase directors and perpendicularly to them. The intrinsic biaxial nature of these particles promotes the formation of translationally ordered biaxial phases, but does not show solid evidence that it would, per se, promote the formation of the biaxial nematic phase. Our simulations shed light on the controversial existence of the discotic smectic phase, whose layers are as thick as the minor particle dimension, which is stable in a relatively large portion of our phase diagrams. Additionally, we modify the Onsager theory to describe the isotropic-nematic phase transition of freely rotating biaxial particles as a function of the particle width, and find a relatively strong first-order signature, in excellent agreement with our simulations. In an attempt to shed light on the elusive formation of the biaxial nematic phase, we apply this theory to predict the uniaxial-biaxial nematic phase transition and confirm, again in agreement with simulations, the prevailing stability of the translationally ordered smectic phase over the orientationally ordered biaxial nematic phase.
Use policyThe full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that:• a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in DRO • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders.Please consult the full DRO policy for further details. The phase behavior of a system of hard-cut spheres has been studied using a high-order virial theory and by Monte Carlo simulation. The cut-sphere particles are disks of thickness L formed by symmetrically truncating the end caps of a sphere of diameter D. The virial theory predicts a stable nematic phase for aspect ratio L / D = 0.1 and a stable cubatic phase for L / D = 0.15-0.3. The virial series converges rapidly on the equation of state of the isotropic and nematic phases, while for the cubatic phase the convergence is slower, but still gives good agreement with the simulation at high order. It is found that a high-order expansion ͑up to B 8 ͒ is required to predict a stable cubatic phase for L / D ജ 0.15, indicating the importance of many-body interactions in stabilizing this phase. Previous simulation work on this system has focused on aspect ratios L / D = 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3. We expand this to include also L / D = 0.15 and 0.25, and we introduce a fourth-rank tensor to measure cubatic ordering. We have applied a multiparticle move which dramatically speeds the attainment of equilibrium in the nematic phase and therefore is of great benefit in the study of the isotropic-nematic phase transition. In agreement with the theory, our simulations confirm the stability of the nematic phase for L / D = 0.1 and the stability of the cubatic phase over the nematic for L / D = 0.15-0.3. There is, however, some doubt about the stability of the cubatic phase with respect to the columnar. We have shown that the cubatic phase found on compression at L / D = 0.1 is definitely metastable, but the results for L / D = 0.2 were less conclusive.
Short- and long-range correlations between solutes in solvents can influence the macroscopic chemistry and physical properties of solutions in ways that are not fully understood. The class of liquids known as complex (structured) fluids—containing multiscale aggregates resulting from weak self-assembly—are especially important in energy-relevant systems employed for a variety of chemical- and biological-based purification, separation, and catalytic processes. In these, solute (mass) transfer across liquid–liquid (water, oil) phase boundaries is the core function. Oftentimes the operational success of phase transfer chemistry is dependent upon the bulk fluid structures for which a common functional motif and an archetype aggregate is the micelle. In particular, there is an emerging consensus that mass transfer and bulk organic phase behaviors—notably the critical phenomenon of phase splitting—are impacted by the effects of micellar-like aggregates in water-in-oil microemulsions. In this study, we elucidate the microscopic structures and mesoscopic architectures of metal-, water-, and acid-loaded organic phases using a combination of X-ray and neutron experimentation as well as density functional theory and molecular dynamics simulations. The key conclusion is that the transfer of metal ions between an aqueous phase and an organic one involves the formation of small mononuclear clusters typical of metal–ligand coordination chemistry, at one extreme, in the organic phase, and their aggregation to multinuclear primary clusters that self-assemble to form even larger superclusters typical of supramolecular chemistry, at the other. Our metrical results add an orthogonal perspective to the energetics-based view of phase splitting in chemical separations known as the micellar model—founded upon the interpretation of small-angle neutron scattering data—with respect to a more general phase-space (gas–liquid) model of soft matter self-assembly and particle growth. The structure hierarchy observed in the aggregation of our quinary (zirconium nitrate–nitric acid–water–tri-n-butyl phosphate–n-octane) system is relevant to understanding solution phase transitions, in general, and the function of engineered fluids with metalloamphiphiles, in particular, for mass transfer applications, such as demixing in separation and synthesis in catalysis science.
We present evidence that the transition between organic and third phases, which can be observed in the plutonium uranium reduction extraction (PUREX) process at high metal loading, is an unusual transition between two isotropic bicontinuous microemulsion phases. As this system contains so many components, however, we have been seeking first to investigate the properties of a simpler system, namely, the related metal-free, quaternary water/n-dodecane/nitric acid/tributyl phosphate (TBP) system. This quaternary system has been shown to exhibit, under appropriate conditions, three coexisting phases: a light organic phase, an aqueous phase, and the so-called third phase. In the current work, we focused on the coexistence of the light organic phase with the third phase. Using Gibbs ensemble Monte Carlo (GEMC) simulations, we found coexistence of a phase rich in nitric acid and dilute in n-dodecane (the third phase) with a phase more dilute in nitric acid but rich in n-dodecane (the light organic phase). The compositions and densities of these two coexisting phases determined using the simulations were in good agreement with those determined experimentally. Because such systems are generally dense and the molecules involved are not simple, the particle exchange rate in their GEMC simulations can be rather low. To test whether a system having a composition between those of the observed third and organic phases is indeed unstable with respect to phase separation, we used the Bennett acceptance ratio method to calculate the Gibbs energies of the homogeneous phase and the weighted average of the two coexisting phases, where the compositions of these phases were taken both from experimental results and from the results of the GEMC simulations. Both demixed states were determined to have statistically significant lower Gibbs energies than the uniform, mixed phase, providing confirmation that the GEMC simulations correctly predicted the phase separation. Snapshots from the simulations and a cluster analysis of the organic and third phases revealed structures akin to bicontinuous microemulsion phases, with the polar species residing within a mesh and with the surface of the mesh formed by amphiphilic TBP molecules. The nonpolar n-dodecane molecules were observed in these snapshots to be outside this mesh. The only large-scale structural differences observed between the two phases were the dimensions of the mesh. Evidence for the correctness of these structures was provided by the results of small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) studies, where the profiles obtained for both the organic and third phases agreed well with those calculated from simulations. Finally, we looked at the microscopic structures of the two phases. In the organic phase, the basic motif was observed to be one nitric acid molecule hydrogen-bonded to a TBP molecule. In the third phase, the most common structure was that of the hydrogen-bonded TBP-HNO-HNO chain. A cluster analysis provided evidence for TBP forming an extended, connected network in both phases. S...
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