Revealing Liquid-Gas Transitions with Finite-Size Scaling in Experimental and Simulation Systems Confined by an External Field

Abstract

The application of an external field often renders empirical criteria for identifying liquid-gas phase transitions ambiguous. Here, we demonstrate that the finite-size scaling of the density profile provides a definitive criterion to distinguish liquid-gas coexistence from a single fluid phase in field-confined systems. Our scaling method collapses the density profiles of different system sizes onto a single master curve for a one-phase system, while causing the profiles to intersect at the interface in a two-phase system. We validate this theoretical proposal through experiments and simulations of two model systems: colloidal suspensions under gravity and two-dimensional complex plasmas confined by a central potential. Our method is broadly applicable for detecting liquid-gas phase transitions in laboratory systems where external fields are inherent.

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Nov 2025
Accepted
08 Feb 2026
First published
09 Feb 2026

Soft Matter, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Revealing Liquid-Gas Transitions with Finite-Size Scaling in Experimental and Simulation Systems Confined by an External Field

C. Zha, Y. Chen, C. Du, P. Tan and Y. Jin, Soft Matter, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5SM01165E

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