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A mean-field theory is presented which describes the basic observations of recent experiments revealing rich wetting behaviour of n-alkane/methanol mixtures at the liquid-vapour interface. The theory, qualitative and in part heuristic, is based on a microscopic lattice-gas model from which a Cahn-Landau approach is distilled. Besides the physics associated with the short-range components of the intermolecular interactions, effects of the long-range tails of the net van der Waals forces between interfaces are also taken into account. Including weak long-range forces which favour wetting in the theory does not visibly alter the critical wetting transition for the nonane/methanol mixture, in contrast with the generic expectation of first-order wetting for such systems, but in good agreement with experiment. For decane/methanol weak long-range forces bring the transition very close to the prewetting critical point, leading to an adsorption behaviour closely reminiscent of short-range tricritical wetting, observed experimentally for alkane chain length between 9.6 and 10. Finally, for undecane/methanol the transition is clearly of first order. First-order wetting is also seen in the experiment.
An ultralow-temperature binary mixture of Bose-Einstein condensates adsorbed at an optical wall can undergo a wetting phase transition in which one of the species excludes the other from contact with the wall. Interestingly, while hard-wall boundary
Within mean-field theory we study wetting of elastic substrates. Our analysis is based on a grand canonical free energy functional of the fluid number density and of the substrate displacement field. The substrate is described in terms of the linear
If a fluctuating medium is confined, the ensuing perturbation of its fluctuation spectrum generates Casimir-like effective forces acting on its confining surfaces. Near a continuous phase transition of such a medium the corresponding order parameter
The excess adsorption $Gamma $ in two-dimensional Ising strips $(infty times L)$ subject to identical boundary fields, at both one-dimensional surfaces decaying in the orthogonal direction $j$ as $-h_1j^{-p}$, is studied for various values of $p$ and
In living cells, protein-rich condensates can wet the cell membrane and surfaces of membrane-bound organelles. Interestingly, many phase-separating proteins also bind to membranes leading to a molecular layer of bound molecules. Here we investigate h