AUTHOR=Pérez-Guerrero Daniela , Arauz-Lara José Luis , Sarmiento-Gómez Erick , Guerrero-García Guillermo Iván
TITLE=On the Time Transition Between Short- and Long-Time Regimes of Colloidal Particles in External Periodic Potentials
JOURNAL=Frontiers in Physics
VOLUME=9
YEAR=2021
URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/physics/articles/10.3389/fphy.2021.635269
DOI=10.3389/fphy.2021.635269
ISSN=2296-424X
ABSTRACT=
The dynamics of colloidal particles at infinite dilution, under the influence of periodic external potentials, is studied here via experiments and numerical simulations for two representative potentials. From the experimental side, we analyzed the motion of a colloidal tracer in a one-dimensional array of fringes produced by the interference of two coherent laser beams, providing in this way an harmonic potential. The numerical analysis has been performed via Brownian dynamics (BD) simulations. The BD simulations correctly reproduced the experimental position- and time-dependent density of probability of the colloidal tracer in the short-times regime. The long-time diffusion coefficient has been obtained from the corresponding numerical mean square displacement (MSD). Similarly, a simulation of a random walker in a one dimensional array of adjacent cages with a probability of escaping from one cage to the next cage is one of the most simple models of a periodic potential, displaying two diffusive regimes separated by a dynamical caging period. The main result of this study is the observation that, in both potentials, it is seen that the critical time t*, defined as the specific time at which a change of curvature in the MSD is observed, remains approximately constant as a function of the height barrier U0 of the harmonic potential or the associated escape probability of the random walker. In order to understand this behavior, histograms of the first passage time of the tracer have been calculated for several height barriers U0 or escape probabilities. These histograms display a maximum at the most likely first passage time t′, which is approximately independent of the height barrier U0, or the associated escape probability, and it is located very close to the critical time t*. This behavior suggests that the critical time t*, defining the crossover between short- and long-time regimes, can be identified as the most likely first passage time t′ as a first approximation.