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      Microscopic diffusion coefficients of dumbbell- and spherocylinder-shaped colloids and their application in simulations of crowded monolayers.

      1 , 1 , 1
      The Journal of chemical physics
      AIP Publishing

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          Abstract

          We explore the diffusion properties of colloidal particles with dumbbell and spherocylinder shapes using a hydrodynamic bead-shell approach and additional Brownian dynamics (BD) simulations. By applying the bead-shell method, we determine empirical formulas for the microscopic diffusion coefficients. A comparison of these formulas and established experimental and theoretical results shows remarkable agreement. For example, the maximum relative discrepancy found for dumbbells is less than 5%. As an application example of the empirical formulas, we perform two-dimensional (2D) BD simulations based on a single dumbbell or spherocylinder in a suspension of spheres and calculate the resulting effective long-time diffusion coefficients. The performed BD simulations can be compared to quasi-2D systems such as colloids confined at the interface of two fluids. We find that the effective diffusion coefficient of translation mostly depends on the sphere area fraction ϕ, while the effective diffusion coefficient of rotation is influenced by the aspect ratio and ϕ. Furthermore, the effective rotational diffusion constant seems to depend on the particle shape with the corresponding implementation of the interactions. In the resolution limit of our methods, the shape-dependent differences of the microscopic diffusion coefficients and the long-time diffusion constant of translation are negligible in the first approximation. The determined empirical formulas for the microscopic diffusion coefficients add to the knowledge of the diffusion of anisotropic particles, and they can be used in countless future studies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Chem Phys
          The Journal of chemical physics
          AIP Publishing
          1089-7690
          0021-9606
          Sep 14 2021
          : 155
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Statistical and Computational Physics, Department of Physics, University of Konstanz, 78464 Konstanz, Germany.
          Article
          10.1063/5.0060063
          34525819
          d13c058e-675d-4b87-a2e0-8c3b0089bdde
          History

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