The buckling transition of ionic shells and electrostatics
ORAL
Abstract
Can one design the morphology of a shell with diverse symmetries by coassembling oppositely charged molecules? We present the results of numerical simulations of a model for an ionic shell at different stoichiometric ratios. The tendency of electrostatic interactions to organize a system of charges (globally electroneutral) along flat planes, competes with the curved geometry of the shell. An ``electrostatic buckling'' instability ensues, and at low-temperatures a variety of shapes arise, beyond the icosahedral one typical of large viruses, large fullerenes, and catanionic-anionic vesicles. We study also the effects of temperature, different dielectric environments, and screening salt.
*Research supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering under Award DE-FG02-08ER46539
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