Characterisation of the thermodynamics, structure and dynamics of a water-like model in 2- and 3-dimensions
Abstract
The physical properties of colloidal particles suspended in an aqueous environment are well-understood when the latter is considered to be a continuum and a structureless medium. However, this approach fails to explain complex phenomena, for example, the critical Casimir forces among colloids and the colloidal self-assembly near critical solvents, and the inertial contribution of the solvent molecules on the diffusion of non-spherical Brownian particles. Therefore, the role played by the solvent on the physical properties of colloidal dispersions is of paramount relevance. Recently, there has been an interest in the (non-trivial) diffusion mechanisms of a nano-colloidal particle in a solvent that undergoes a vapour–liquid transition. Nonetheless, the models typically used to incorporate the solvent details do not capture quantitatively the thermodynamic properties of real substances. It is then important to study the Brownian motion of colloids in more realistic models. To reach such goal, one first has to characterise the thermodynamic states and the microscopic features of the solvent. Hence, in this contribution, we have investigated the coexistence densities of a core-softened potential in two- and three-dimensions, whose potential parameters are able to capture some anomalies of water. We show that in the two-dimensional case, the potential model exhibits, besides the normal vapour–liquid coexistence region, additional liquid–liquid coexistence densities. We particularly focus our attention to the structural properties and the dynamical behaviour of the solvent around the liquid–liquid critical point and assess the differences with the three-dimensional case.