Phys. Rev. E 62, 2608–2619 (2000)Charge-reversal instability in mixed bilayer vesiclesReceived 15 February 2000; published in the issue dated August 2000 Bilayer vesicles form readily from mixtures of charged and neutral surfactants. When such a mixed vesicle binds an oppositely charged object, its membrane partially demixes: the adhesion zone recruits more charged surfactants from the rest of the membrane. Given an unlimited supply of adhering objects one might expect the vesicle to remain attractive until it was completely covered. Contrary to this expectation, we show that a vesicle can instead exhibit adhesion saturation, partitioning spontaneously into an attractive zone with definite area fraction, and a repulsive zone. The latter zone rejects additional incoming objects because counterions on the interior of the vesicle migrate there, effectively reversing the membrane’s charge. The effect is strongest at high surface charge densities, low ionic strength, and with thin, impermeable membranes. Adhesion saturation in such a situation has recently been observed experimentally [H. Aranda-Espinoza et al., Science 285, 394 (1999)]. © 2000 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.62.2608
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.62.2608
PACS:
87.10.+e, 87.16.Dg, 82.65.Dp, 82.70.Dd
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