Structural Transitions and Hysteresis in Clump and Stripe-forming Colloids Under Dynamic Compression

ORAL

Abstract

Using numerical simulations, we study the dynamical evolution of particles interacting via competing long-range repulsion and short-range attraction in 2D. The particles are compressed using a time-dependent quasi-one dimensional trough potential that controls the local density, causing a series of structural phase transitions from a low density clump lattice to stripes, voids, and a high density uniform state. The compression proceeds via slow elastic motion that is interrupted with avalanche-like bursts of activity as the system collapses via plastic rearrangements. The plastic events vary in magnitude from small rearrangements of particles, including the formation of quadrupole-like defects, to large-scale vorticity and structural phase transitions. In the dense uniform phase, the system compresses through row reduction transitions mediated by a disorder-order process. We characterize the rearrangement events by measuring changes in the energy, the fraction of sixfold coordinated particles, the local density, and the velocity distribution. At high confinements, we find power law scaling of the velocity distribution during row reduction transitions. We observe hysteresis under a reversal of the compression when relatively few plastic rearrangements occur.

Authors

  • Danielle McDermott

    Wabash College, Department of Physics, Wabash College

  • Cynthia Jane Reichhardt

    Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Division and Center for Nonlinear Studies, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • Charles Reichhardt

    Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Division and Center for Nonlinear Studies, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory