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We consider fluids where the attractive interaction at distances slightly larger than the particle size is dominated at larger distances by a repulsive contribution. A previous investigation of the effects of the competition between attraction and repulsion on the liquid-vapour transition and on the correlations is extended to the study of the stability of liquid-vapour phase separation with respect to freezing. We find that this long-range repulsive part of the interaction expands the region where the fluid-solid transition preempts the liquid-vapour one, so that the critical point becomes metastable at longer attraction ranges than those required for purely attractive potentials. Moreover, the large density fluctuations that occur near the liquid-vapour critical point are greatly enhanced by the competition between attractive and repulsive forces, and encompass a much wider region than in the attractive case. The decay of correlations for states where the compressibility is large is governed by two characteristic lengths, and the usual Ornstein-Zernike picture breaks down except for the very neighborhood of the critical point, where one length reduces to the commonly adopted correlation length, while the other one saturates at a finite value.
According to extensive experimental findings, the Ginzburg temperature $t_{G}$ for ionic fluids differs substantially from that of nonionic fluids [Schroer W., Weig{a}rtner H. 2004 {it Pure Appl. Chem.} {bf 76} 19]. A theoretical investigation of thi
We find that a system of particles interacting through a simple isotropic potential with a softened core is able to exhibit a rich phase behavior including: a liquid-liquid phase transition in the supercooled phase, as has been suggested for water; a
A model of polar fluid is studied theoretically. The interaction potential, in addition to dipole-dipole term, possesses a dispersion contribution of the van der Waals-London form. It is found that when the dispersion force is comparable to dipole-di
Three one-body profiles that correspond to local fluctuations in energy, in entropy, and in particle number are used to describe the equilibrium properties of inhomogeneous classical many-body systems. Local fluctuations are obtained from thermodynam
Many experiments show that protein condensates formed by liquid-liquid phase separation exhibit aging rheological properties. Quantitatively, recent experiments by Jawerth et al. (Science 370, 1317, 2020) show that protein condensates behave as aging