A detailed simulation of the packing behaviour of deformable particles settles the debate about whether soft matter can adopt an unconventional crystal structure at high densities — it can. The hunt is now on for a real-world example.
At a glance
Figure 1: Two particles, one centre.
a–d, Soft particles formed from polymers can change shape and interpenetrate in such a way that their centres of mass coincide, as shown here for pairs of: polymer chains (a); polymer rings (b); three-armed polymer 'stars' (c); and dendrimers (connected stars; d). The centres of mass (red dots) of the green and purple particles coincide, even though not all of the monomers overlap. (Graphic courtesy of Lorenzo Rovigatti.)
Figure 2: The formation of clumpy crystals in two dimensions.
a, At high density, soft particles (shown as transparent spheres; diameter corresponds to each particle's typical size) might adopt an arrangement in which they partially overlap with several neighbours. The total repulsion exerted on each particle by its neighbours is high. b, Alternatively, the same particles might form a regular lattice of 'clumps'; in this case, each clump contains an average of three overlapping particles. Particles belonging to distinct clumps do not interact, so that the overall repulsion exerted on each particle is less than that in a. Particles might also be able to hop between lattice sites (arrow). Lenz and colleagues' numerical simulations1 reveal that dendrimeric soft particles form clumpy crystals. (Graphic courtesy of Lorenzo Rovigatti.)
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