40 research outputs found
Crossover from fast relaxation to physical aging in colloidal adsorption at fluid interfaces
The adsorption dynamics of a colloidal particle at a fluid interface is
studied theoretically and numerically, documenting distinctly different
relaxation regimes. The adsorption of a perfectly smooth particle is
characterized by a fast exponential relaxation to thermodynamic equilibrium
where the interfacial free energy has a minimum. The short relaxation time is
given by the ratio of viscous damping to capillary forces. Physical and/or
chemical heterogeneities in a colloidal system, however, can result in multiple
minima of the free energy giving rise to metastability. In the presence of
metastable states we observe a crossover to a slow logarithmic relaxation
reminiscent of physical aging in glassy systems. The long relaxation time is
determined by the thermally-activated escape rate from metastable states.
Analytical expressions derived in this work yield quantitative agreement with
molecular dynamics simulations and recent experimental observations. This work
provides new insights on the adsorption dynamics of colloidal particles at
fluid interfaces
A mesoscopic model for microscale hydrodynamics and interfacial phenomena: Slip, films, and contact angle hysteresis
We present a model based on the lattice Boltzmann equation that is suitable
for the simulation of dynamic wetting. The model is capable of exhibiting
fundamental interfacial phenomena such as weak adsorption of fluid on the solid
substrate and the presence of a thin surface film within which a disjoining
pressure acts. Dynamics in this surface film, tightly coupled with
hydrodynamics in the fluid bulk, determine macroscopic properties of primary
interest: the hydrodynamic slip; the equilibrium contact angle; and the static
and dynamic hysteresis of the contact angles. The pseudo- potentials employed
for fluid-solid interactions are composed of a repulsive core and an attractive
tail that can be independently adjusted. This enables effective modification of
the functional form of the disjoining pressure so that one can vary the static
and dynamic hysteresis on surfaces that exhibit the same equilibrium contact
angle. The modeled solid-fluid interface is diffuse, represented by a wall
probability function which ultimately controls the momentum exchange between
solid and fluid phases. This approach allows us to effectively vary the slip
length for a given wettability (i.e. the static contact angle) of the solid
substrate
