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Phase separation in binary mixtures in the presence of Janus particles has been studied in terms of a Cahn-Hilliard model coupled to the Langevin equations describing the particle dynamics. We demonstrate that the phase separation process is arrested leading to unexpected regular stripe patterns in the concentration field. The underlying pattern forming mechanism has been elucidated: The twofold absorption properties on the surface of Janus particles with respect to the two components of a binary mixture trigger in their neighborhood spatial concentration variations. They result in an effective interaction between the particles mediated by the binary mixture. Our findings open a route to design composite materials with nanoscale lamellar morphologies where the pattern wavelength can be tuned by changing the wetting properties of the Janus particles.
Crystals melt when thermal excitations or the concentration of defects in the lattice is sufficiently high. Upon melting, the crystalline long-range order vanishes, turning the solid to a fluid. In contrast to this classical scenario of solid melting
The phase diagram of binary mixtures of particles interacting via a pair potential of parallel dipoles is computed at zero temperature as a function of composition and the ratio of their magnetic susceptibilities. Using lattice sums, a rich variety o
We study a binary mixture of polar chiral (counterclockwise or clockwise) active particles in a two-dimensional box with periodic boundary conditions. Beside the excluded volume interactions between particles, particles are also subject to the polar
The diffusion of an artificial active particle in a two-dimensional periodic pattern of stationary convection cells is investigated by means of extensive numerical simulations. In the limit of large Peclet numbers, i.e., for self-propulsion speeds be
In this article, we study the phenomenology of a two dimensional dilute suspension of active amphiphilic Janus particles. We analyze how the morphology of the aggregates emerging from their self-assembly depends on the strength and the direction of t