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Macromolecular diffusion in dense colloidal suspensions is an intriguing topic of interdisciplinary relevance in Science and Engineering. While significant efforts have been undertaken to establish the impact of crowding on the dynamics of macromolecules, less clear is the role played by long-range ordering. In this work, we perform Dynamic Monte Carlo simulations to assess the importance of ordered crowding on the diffusion of globular macromolecules, here modelled as spherical tracers, in suspensions of colloidal cuboids. We first investigate the diffusion of such guest tracers in very weakly ordered host phases of cuboids and, by increasing density above the isotropic-to-nematic phase boundary, study the influence of long-range orientational ordering imposed by the occurrence of liquid-crystalline phases. To this end, we analyse a spectrum of dynamical properties that clarify the existence of slow and fast tracers and the extent of deviations from Gaussian behaviour. Our results unveil the existence of randomly oriented clusters of cuboids that display a relatively large size in dense isotropic phases, but are basically absent in the nematic phase. We believe that these clusters are responsible for a pronounced non-Gaussian dynamics that is much weaker in the nematic phase, where orientational ordering smooths out such structural heterogeneities.
Understanding how colloidal suspensions behave in confined environments has a striking relevance in practical applications. Despite the fact that the behaviour of colloids in the bulk is key to identify the main elements affecting their equilibrium a
Colloidal crystals formed by size-asymmetric binary particles co-assemble into a wide variety of colloidal compounds with lattices akin to ionic crystals. Recently, a transition from a compound phase with a sublattice of small particles to a metal-li
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We investigate the elastic and yielding properties of two dimensional defect-free mono-crystals made of highly monodisperse droplets. Crystals are compressed between two parallel boundaries of which one acts as a force sensor. As the available space