Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Computer simulation of molecular exchange in colloidal systems

Evilevitch, Alex LU orcid ; Rescic, J ; Jönsson, Bengt LU and Olsson, Ulf LU (2002) In The Journal of Physical Chemistry Part B 106(45). p.11746-11757
Abstract
In this paper, we introduce two computer simulation models to study molecular exchange between aggregates in a colloidal dispersion. The Brownian motion of the colloidal aggregates is simulated as a random walk with a Gaussian distributed step length. In model I, the exchanging molecules are simulated as discrete particles with the exchange process characterized by desorption, molecular diffusion, and adsorption. A molecule desorbed from an aggregate is registered in the simulation and allowed to undergo individual Brownian motion until it adsorbs onto another colloidal aggregate or returns to the same aggregate from which it originated. In this detailed simulation, random size fluctuations are obtained in addition to a net variation in a... (More)
In this paper, we introduce two computer simulation models to study molecular exchange between aggregates in a colloidal dispersion. The Brownian motion of the colloidal aggregates is simulated as a random walk with a Gaussian distributed step length. In model I, the exchanging molecules are simulated as discrete particles with the exchange process characterized by desorption, molecular diffusion, and adsorption. A molecule desorbed from an aggregate is registered in the simulation and allowed to undergo individual Brownian motion until it adsorbs onto another colloidal aggregate or returns to the same aggregate from which it originated. In this detailed simulation, random size fluctuations are obtained in addition to a net variation in a relaxing, nonequilibrium size distribution. For many processes, net variations are very slow compared to the random fluctuations, making this detailed method very time consuming for studying a relaxing size distribution. For this reason, we also consider, in model II, a more approximate method where only the net flow of molecules between aggregates is considered. Here, the flow of molecules is for each time step calculated assuming steady state conditions and pair wise additivity. The flow between an isolated pair of aggregates can be solved exactly. Although the pair flow is a good approximation at short separations, it becomes significantly reduced at larger separations because of the presence of other aggregates. This screening of the flow at larger separations is accounted for by introducing an exponential damping function. With these models, we have simulated the solubilization of larger oil drops by smaller micelles which has previously been experimentally studied in a nonionic surfactant-water-oil system. Besides comparing with experiments, the simulations provides a test of a previous mean-field cell model analysis of the solubilization process. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Part B
volume
106
issue
45
pages
11746 - 11757
publisher
The American Chemical Society (ACS)
external identifiers
  • wos:000179180400007
  • scopus:0037079181
ISSN
1520-5207
DOI
10.1021/jp020467r
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0eb3e68b-aec3-40fb-bfe0-2924a2e30b5e (old id 323416)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 15:20:59
date last changed
2022-02-27 06:36:30
@article{0eb3e68b-aec3-40fb-bfe0-2924a2e30b5e,
  abstract     = {{In this paper, we introduce two computer simulation models to study molecular exchange between aggregates in a colloidal dispersion. The Brownian motion of the colloidal aggregates is simulated as a random walk with a Gaussian distributed step length. In model I, the exchanging molecules are simulated as discrete particles with the exchange process characterized by desorption, molecular diffusion, and adsorption. A molecule desorbed from an aggregate is registered in the simulation and allowed to undergo individual Brownian motion until it adsorbs onto another colloidal aggregate or returns to the same aggregate from which it originated. In this detailed simulation, random size fluctuations are obtained in addition to a net variation in a relaxing, nonequilibrium size distribution. For many processes, net variations are very slow compared to the random fluctuations, making this detailed method very time consuming for studying a relaxing size distribution. For this reason, we also consider, in model II, a more approximate method where only the net flow of molecules between aggregates is considered. Here, the flow of molecules is for each time step calculated assuming steady state conditions and pair wise additivity. The flow between an isolated pair of aggregates can be solved exactly. Although the pair flow is a good approximation at short separations, it becomes significantly reduced at larger separations because of the presence of other aggregates. This screening of the flow at larger separations is accounted for by introducing an exponential damping function. With these models, we have simulated the solubilization of larger oil drops by smaller micelles which has previously been experimentally studied in a nonionic surfactant-water-oil system. Besides comparing with experiments, the simulations provides a test of a previous mean-field cell model analysis of the solubilization process.}},
  author       = {{Evilevitch, Alex and Rescic, J and Jönsson, Bengt and Olsson, Ulf}},
  issn         = {{1520-5207}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{45}},
  pages        = {{11746--11757}},
  publisher    = {{The American Chemical Society (ACS)}},
  series       = {{The Journal of Physical Chemistry Part B}},
  title        = {{Computer simulation of molecular exchange in colloidal systems}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp020467r}},
  doi          = {{10.1021/jp020467r}},
  volume       = {{106}},
  year         = {{2002}},
}