1,530 research outputs found
Flow boundary conditions from nano- to micro-scales
The development of microfluidic devices has recently revived the interest in
"old" problems associated with transport at, or across, interfaces. As the
characteristic sizes are decreased, the use of pressure gradients to transport
fluids becomes problematic, and new, interface driven, methods must be
considered. This has lead to new investigations of flow near interfaces, and to
the conception of interfaces engineered at various scales to reduce flow
friction. In this review, we discuss the present theoretical understanding of
flow past solid interfaces at different length scales. We also briefly discuss
the corresponding phenomenon of heat transport, and the influence of surface
slip on interface driven (e.g. electro-osmotic) flows.Comment: submitted to "Soft Matter
Heterogeneities in amorphous systems under shear
The last decade has seen major progresses in studies of elementary mechanisms
of deformation in amorphous materials. Here, we start with a review of
physically-based theories of plasticity, going back to the identification of
"shear-transformations" as early as the 70's. We show how constructive
criticism of the theoretical models permits to formulate questions concerning
the role of structural disorder, mechanical noise, and long-ranged elastic
interactions. These questions provide the necessary context to understand what
has motivated recent numerical studies. We then summarize their results, show
why they had to focus on athermal systems, and point out the outstanding
questions.Comment: Chapter of "Dynamical Heterogeneities in glasses, colloids and
granular materials", Eds.: L. Berthier, G. Biroli, J-P Bouchaud, L.
Cipelletti and W. van Saarloos (Oxford University Press, to appear), more
info at http://w3.lcvn.univ-montp2.fr/~lucacip/DH_book.ht
Local dynamics and primitive path analysis for a model polymer melt near a surface
By applying local primitive path and Rouse modes analysis we study the chains
conformations, local dynamics and viscosity of a model polymer melt in a
polymer-wall interface. We establish that the presence of a repulsive wall
leads to acceleration of the dynamics both for unentangled and weakly entangled
melts and to a depletion in the entanglement density in the wall vicinity. When
the surface bears some grafted chains, we show that the melt chains are
accelerated in the unentangled regime and slowed down in the entangled regime.
By analyzing the primitive paths we attribute the observed slowdown to an
increase in the entanglement density in the interfacial layer. The presence of
a relatively small density of grafting sites thus leads to improved mechanical
properties (reinforcement) and decreases locally the entanglement length even
if the surface is repulsive
Modeling transient absorption and thermal conductivity in a simple nanofluid
Molecular dynamics simulations are used to simulate the thermal properties of
a model fluid containing nanoparticles (nanofluid). By modelling transient
absorption experiments, we show that they provide a reliable determination of
interfacial resistance between the particle and the fluid. The flexibility of
molecular simulation allows us to consider separately the effect of
confinement, particle mass and Brownian motion on the thermal transfer between
fluid and particle. Finally, we show that in the absence of collective effects,
the heat conductivity of the nanofluid is well described by the classical
Maxwell Garnet equation model
On the definition of temperature in dense granular media
In this Letter we report the measurement of a pseudo-temperature for
compacting granular media on the basis of the Fluctuation-Dissipation relations
in the aging dynamics of a model system. From the violation of the
Fluctuation-Dissipation Theorem an effective temperature emerges (a dynamical
temperature T_{dyn}) whose ratio with the equilibrium temperature T_d^{eq}
depends on the particle density. We compare the results for the
Fluctuation-Dissipation Ratio (FDR) T_{dyn}/T_d^{eq} at several densities with
the outcomes of Edwards' approach at the corresponding densities. It turns out
that the FDR and the so-called Edwards' ratio coincide at several densities
(very different ages of the system), opening in this way the door to
experimental checks as well as theoretical constructions.Comment: RevTex4 4 pages, 4 eps figure
Shear localization in a model glass
Using molecular dynamics simulations, we show that a simple model of a glassy
material exhibits the shear localization phenomenon observed in many complex
fluids. At low shear rates, the system separates into a fluidized shear-band
and an unsheared part. The two bands are characterized by a very different
dynamics probed by a local intermediate scattering function. Furthermore, a
stick-slip motion is observed at very small shear rates. Our results, which
open the possibility of exploring complex rheological behavior using
simulations, are compared to recent experiments on various soft glasses.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures (5 figure files
Continuum limit of amorphous elastic bodies (III): Three dimensional systems
Extending recent numerical studies on two dimensional amorphous bodies, we
characterize the approach of elastic continuum limit in three dimensional
(weakly polydisperse) Lennard-Jones systems. While performing a systematic
finite-size analysis (for two different quench protocols) we investigate the
non-affine displacement field under external strain, the linear response to an
external delta force and the low-frequency harmonic eigenmodes and their
density distribution. Qualitatively similar behavior is found as in two
dimensions. We demonstrate that the classical elasticity description breaks
down below an intermediate length scale , which in our system is
approximately 23 molecular sizes. This length characterizes the correlations of
the non-affine displacement field, the self-averaging of external noise with
distance from the source and gives the lower wave length bound for the
applicability of the classical eigenfrequency calculations. We trace back the
"Boson-peak" of the density of eigenfrequencies (obtained from the velocity
auto-correlation function) to the inhomogeneities on wave lengths smaller than
.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Nucleation in hydrophobic cylindrical pores : a lattice model
We consider the nucleation process associated with capillary condensation of
a vapor in a hydrophobic cylindrical pore (capillary evaporation). The
liquid-vapor transition is described within the framework of a simple lattice
model. The phase properties are characterized both at the mean-field level and
using Monte-Carlo simulations. The nucleation process for the liquid to vapor
transition is then specifically considered. Using umbrella sampling techniques,
we show that nucleation occurs through the condensation of an asymmetric vapor
bubble at the pore surface. Even for highly confined systems, good agreement is
found with macroscopic considerations based on classical nucleation theory. The
results are discussed in the context of recent experimental work on the
extrusion of water in hydrophobic pores
Boundary Condition of Polyelectrolyte Adsorption
The modification of the boundary condition for polyelectrolyte adsorption on
charged surface with short-ranged interaction is investigated under two
regimes. For weakly charged Gaussian polymer in which the short-ranged
attraction dominates, the boundary condition is the same as that of the neutral
polymer adsorption. For highly charged polymer (compressed state) in which the
electrostatic interaction dominates, the linear relationship (electrostatic
boundary condition) between the surface monomer density and the surface charge
density needs to be modified.Comment: 4 page
Introducing Variable Cell Shape Methods in Field Theory Simulations of Polymers
We propose a new method for carrying out field-theoretic simulations of
polymer systems under conditions of prescribed external stress, allowing for
shape changes in the simulation box. A compact expression for the deviatoric
stress tensor is derived in terms of the chain propagator, and is used to
monitor changes in the box shape according to a simple relaxation scheme. The
method allows fully relaxed, stress free configurations to be obtained even in
non trivial morphologies, and enables the study of morphology transitions
induced by external stresses
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