1999
The role of long-range forces in the phase behavior of colloids and proteins
Publication
Publication
Europhys. Lett. , Volume 48 p. 332- 338
The phase behavior of colloid-polymer mixtures, and of solutions of globular proteins, is often interpreted in terms of a simple model of hard spheres with short-ranged attraction. While such a model yields a qualitative understanding of the generic phase diagrams of both colloids and proteins, it fails to capture one important difference: the model predicts fluid-fluid phase separation in the metastable regime below the freezing curve. Such demixing has been observed for globular proteins, but for colloids it appears to be pre-empted by the appearance of a gel. In this paper, we study the effect of additional long-range attractions on the phase behavior of spheres with short-ranged attraction. We find that such attractions can shift the (metastable) fluid-fluid critical point out of the gel region. As this metastable critical point may be important for crystal nucleation, our results suggest that long-ranged attractive forces may play an important role in the crystallization of globular proteins. However, in colloids, where refractive index matching is often used to switch off long-ranged dispersion forces, gelation is likely to inhibit phase separation.
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Europhys. Lett. | |
Noro, M. G., Kern, N., & Frenkel, D. (1999). The role of long-range forces in the phase behavior of colloids and proteins. Europhys. Lett., 48, 332–338. |