Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Eli Sloutskin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Eli Sloutskin.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

The surface structure of ionic liquids: Comparing simulations with x-ray measurements

Eli Sloutskin; R. M. Lynden-Bell; Sundaram Balasubramanian; Moshe Deutsch

The surface-normal electron density profile of an ionic liquid, [bmim][PF6], derived from x-ray reflectivity measurements, is compared with two independent molecular-dynamics simulations. It is shown that a meaningful comparison requires a detailed accounting for both thermal and nonthermal surface roughening effects. The former is due to thermally excited capillary waves, and the latter is due to the molecular zero-point motion and form. These quantities influence very significantly, but differently, the simulated and measured density profiles. Stripping off these effects from both types of profiles yields the intrinsic structure factor of the surface. The simulated intrinsic structure factors are found to deviate considerably from the measured one. The introduction of additional ad hoc surface roughness to the simulated profiles greatly reduces the deviation, however, no physical origin for this effect can be identified. The method employed in this study should prove useful for simulation-experiment comparisons of other liquid surfaces, provided they obey capillary-wave theory, as do almost all liquid surfaces studied to date by x-ray reflectivity.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

The surface structure of concentrated aqueous salt solutions

Eli Sloutskin; J. Baumert; B. M. Ocko; Ivan Kuzmenko; Antonio Checco; L. Tamam; E. Ofer; T. Gog; O. Gang; Moshe Deutsch

The surface-normal electron density profile rhos(z) of concentrated aqueous salt solutions of RbBr, CsCl, LiBr, RbCl, and SrCl2 was determined by x-ray reflectivity (XR). For all but RbBr and SrCl2 rhos(z) increases monotonically with depth z from rhos(z)=0 in the vapor (z<0) to rhos(z)=rhob of the bulk (z>0) over a width of a few angstroms. The width is commensurate with the expected interface broadening by thermally excited capillary waves. Anomalous (resonant) XR of RbBr reveals a depletion at the surface of Br- ions to a depth of approximately 10 A. For SrCl2, the observed rhos(z)>rhob may imply a similar surface depletion of Cl- ions to a depth of a few angstorms. However, as the deviations of the XRs of RbBr and SrCl2 from those of the other solutions are small, the evidence for a different ion composition in the surface and the bulk is not strongly conclusive. Overall, these results contrast earlier theoretical and simulational results and nonstructural measurements, where significant surface layering of alternate, oppositely charged, ions is concluded.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2003

Langmuir films of normal-alkanes on the surface of liquid mercury

H. Kraack; B. M. Ocko; Peter S. Pershan; Eli Sloutskin; Moshe Deutsch

The coverage dependent phase behavior of molecular films of n-alkanes (CH3CHn−2CH3, denote Cn) on mercury was studied for lengths 10⩽n⩽50, using surface tensiometry and surface x-ray diffraction methods. In contrast with Langmuir films on water, where roughly surface-normal molecular orientation is invariably found, alkanes on mercury are always oriented surface-parallel, and show no long-range in-plane order at any surface pressure. At a low coverage a two-dimensional gas phase is found, followed, upon increasing the coverage, by a single condensed layer (n⩽18), a sequence of single and double layers (19⩽n⩽20; n⩾26), or a sequence of single, double, and triple layers (22⩽n⩽24). The thermodynamical and structural properties of these layers, as determined from the measurements, are discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Dense colloidal fluids form denser amorphous sediments

Shir R. Liber; Shai Borohovich; Alexander V. Butenko; Andrew B. Schofield; Eli Sloutskin

We relate, by simple analytical centrifugation experiments, the density of colloidal fluids with the nature of their randomly packed solid sediments. We demonstrate that the most dilute fluids of colloidal hard spheres form loosely packed sediments, where the volume fraction of the particles approaches in frictional systems the random loose packing limit, φRLP = 0.55. The dense fluids of the same spheres form denser sediments, approaching the so-called random close packing limit, φRCP = 0.64. Our experiments, where particle sedimentation in a centrifuge is sufficiently rapid to avoid crystallization, demonstrate that the density of the sediments varies monotonically with the volume fraction of the initial suspension. We reproduce our experimental data by simple computer simulations, where structural reorganizations are prohibited, such that the rate of sedimentation is irrelevant. This suggests that in colloidal systems, where viscous forces dominate, the structure of randomly close-packed and randomly loose-packed sediments is determined by the well-known structure of the initial fluids of simple hard spheres, provided that the crystallization is fully suppressed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

How faceted liquid droplets grow tails

Shani Guttman; Zvi Sapir; Moty Schultz; Alexander V. Butenko; B. M. Ocko; Moshe Deutsch; Eli Sloutskin

Significance Rounded oil-in-water emulsion droplets are ubiquitous in life and technology. We demonstrate that crystallization of the monomolecular nanolayer at the interface of these droplets provides a novel way to control the shape of liquid droplets. In particular, the droplets undergo a spontaneous faceting transition, split, and grow tails. All these transitions are fully temperature-controllable and reversible. The observed phenomena mimic shape selection in virus capsids, virus-associated pyramid formation in lipid membranes, and the growth of rod-like bacteria, yet the underlying mechanism is completely new. The observed effects allow formation of emulsions with controllable attributes, probe the fundamentals of molecular-scale elasticity, and open new routes for self-assembly of complex-shape colloids. Liquid droplets, widely encountered in everyday life, have no flat facets. Here we show that water-dispersed oil droplets can be reversibly temperature-tuned to icosahedral and other faceted shapes, hitherto unreported for liquid droplets. These shape changes are shown to originate in the interplay between interfacial tension and the elasticity of the droplet’s 2-nm-thick interfacial monolayer, which crystallizes at some T = Ts above the oil’s melting point, with the droplet’s bulk remaining liquid. Strikingly, at still-lower temperatures, this interfacial freezing (IF) effect also causes droplets to deform, split, and grow tails. Our findings provide deep insights into molecular-scale elasticity and allow formation of emulsions of tunable stability for directed self-assembly of complex-shaped particles and other future technologies.


Optics Express | 2013

Locating Particles Accurately in Microscope Images Requires Image-Processing Kernels to be Rotationally Symmetric

Peter J. Lu; Maor Shutman; Eli Sloutskin; Alexander V. Butenko

Computerized image-analysis routines deployed widely to locate and track the positions of particles in microscope images include several steps where images are convolved with kernels to remove noise. In many common implementations, some kernels are rotationally asymmetric. Here we show that the use of these asymmetric kernels creates significant artifacts, distorting apparent particle positions in a way that gives the artificial appearance of orientational crystalline order, even in such fully-disordered isotropic systems as simple fluids of hard-sphere-like colloids. We rectify this problem by replacing all asymmetric kernels with rotationally-symmetric kernels, which does not impact code performance. We show that these corrected codes locate particle positions properly, restoring measured isotropy to colloidal fluids. We also investigate rapidly-formed colloidal sediments, and with the corrected codes show that these sediments, often thought to be amorphous, may exhibit strong orientational correlations among bonds between neighboring colloidal particles.


Langmuir | 2012

Coiled to Diffuse: Brownian Motion of a Helical Bacterium

Alexander V. Butenko; E. Mogilko; Lee Amitai; Boaz Pokroy; Eli Sloutskin

We employ real-time three-dimensional confocal microscopy to follow the Brownian motion of a fixed helically shaped Leptospira interrogans (LI) bacterium. We extract from our measurements the translational and the rotational diffusion coefficients of this bacterium. A simple theoretical model is suggested, perfectly reproducing the experimental diffusion coefficients, with no tunable parameters. An older theoretical model, where edge effects are neglected, dramatically underestimates the observed rates of translation. Interestingly, the coiling of LI increases its rotational diffusion coefficient by a factor of 5, compared to a (hypothetical) rectified bacterium of the same contour length. Moreover, the translational diffusion coefficients would have decreased by a factor of ~1.5, if LI were rectified. This suggests that the spiral shape of the spirochaete bacteria, in addition to being employed for their active twisting motion, may also increase the ability of these bacteria to explore the surrounding fluid by passive Brownian diffusion.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

Structure and interactions in fluids of prolate colloidal ellipsoids: Comparison between experiment, theory, and simulation

Avner P Cohen; Erez Janai; Andrew B. Schofield; Eli Sloutskin

The microscopic structure of fluids of simple spheres is well known. However, the constituents of most real-life fluids are non-spherical, leading to a coupling between the rotational and translational degrees of freedom. The structure of simple dense fluids of spheroids - ellipsoids of revolution - was only recently determined by direct experimental techniques [A. P. Cohen, E. Janai, E. Mogilko, A. B. Schofield, and E. Sloutskin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 238301 (2011)]. Using confocal microscopy, it was demonstrated that the structure of these simple fluids cannot be described by hard particle models based on the widely used Percus-Yevick approximation. In this paper, we describe a new protocol for determining the shape of the experimental spheroids, which allows us to expand our previous microscopy measurements of these fluids. To avoid the approximations in the theoretical approach, we have also used molecular dynamics simulations to reproduce the experimental radial distribution functions g(r) and estimate the contribution of charge effects to the interactions. Accounting for these charge effects within the Percus-Yevick framework leads to similar agreement with the experiment.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2002

Surface and bulk phase behavior of dry and hydrated tetradecanol:octadecanol alcohol mixtures

Eli Sloutskin; Eric B. Sirota; H. Kraack; O. Gang; A. Doerr; B. M. Ocko; Moshe Deutsch

Surface freezing was studied in dry and hydrated octadecanol:tetradecanol (C18OH:C14OH) mixtures, using surface tension and synchrotron x-ray surface diffraction techniques. Even small amounts of admixed C18OH were found to induce surface freezing in C14OH, which does not exhibit this effect when pure. The phase diagram of the bulk was measured by calorimetry and bulk x-ray diffraction. Upon increasing the bulk mole fraction of C18OH (φ) a sharp increase in the bulk supercooling occurs at φ≈0.4 in dry mixtures, while no supercooling was observed for the hydrated mixtures. A simple thermodynamical model based on the theory of s-regular mixtures is shown to account well for the dependence of the surface freezing onset temperature of both dry and hydrated mixtures, and the hydrated bulk’s freezing temperature on φ. Only a phenomenological description exists for the dry bulk’s phase diagram. This study is expected to provide a baseline for the general surface and bulk behavior of long-chain alcohol mixtures.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Dipolar colloids in apolar media: direct microscopy of two-dimensional suspensions.

Erez Janai; Avner P Cohen; Alexander V. Butenko; Andrew B. Schofield; Moty Schultz; Eli Sloutskin

Spherical colloids, in an absence of external fields, are commonly assumed to interact solely through rotationally-invariant potentials, u(r). While the presence of permanent dipoles in aqueous suspensions has been previously suggested by some experiments, the rotational degrees of freedom of spherical colloids are typically neglected. We prove, by direct experiments, the presence of permanent dipoles in commonly used spherical poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) colloids, suspended in an apolar organic medium. We study, by a combination of direct confocal microscopy, computer simulations, and theory, the structure and other thermodynamical properties of organic suspensions of colloidal spheres, confined to a two-dimensional (2D) monolayer. Our studies reveal the effects of the dipolar interactions on the structure and the osmotic pressure of these fluids. These observations have far-reaching consequences for the fundamental colloidal science, opening new directions in self-assembly of complex colloidal clusters.

Collaboration


Dive into the Eli Sloutskin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

B. M. Ocko

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge