Issue 32, 2024

Diffusion, density, and defects on spheres

Abstract

We simulate and model diffusion of spherical colloids of radius, a, on spherical surfaces of radius, R, as a function of relative size and surface concentration. Using Brownian dynamics simulations, we quantify diffusion and microstructure at different concentrations ranging from single particles to dense crystalline states. Self-diffusion and structural metrics (pair distribution, local density, and topological charge) are indistinguishable between spheres and planes for all concentrations up to dense liquid states. For concentrations approaching and greater than the freezing transition, smaller spheres with higher curvature show increased diffusivities and nonuniform density/topological defect distributions, which differ qualitatively from planar surfaces. The total topological charge varies quadratically with sphere radius for dense liquid states and linearly with sphere radius for dense crystals with icosahedrally organized grain scars. Between the dense liquid and dense crystal states on spherical surfaces is a regime of fluctuating and interacting defect clusters. We show local density governs self-diffusion in dense liquids on flat and spherical surfaces via the pair distribution. In contrast, dynamic topological defects couple to finite diffusivities through freezing and in low density crystal states on spherical surfaces, where neither exist on flat surfaces.

Graphical abstract: Diffusion, density, and defects on spheres

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Jun 2024
Accepted
26 Jul 2024
First published
26 Jul 2024

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 6371-6383

Diffusion, density, and defects on spheres

J. E. Bond, A. J. Yeh, J. R. Edison and M. A. Bevan, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 6371 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00746H

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