139 research outputs found
Comment on "Model for Heat Conduction in Nanofluids"
A Comment on the Letter by D. Hemanth Kumar et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 93,
144301 (2004)Comment: 2 page
Entropy scaling laws for diffusion
Comment to the letter of Samanta et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 145901 (2004).Comment: 2 pages, 1 figur
Binary Fluids with Long Range Segregating Interaction I: Derivation of Kinetic and Hydrodynamic Equations
We study the evolution of a two component fluid consisting of ``blue'' and
``red'' particles which interact via strong short range (hard core) and weak
long range pair potentials. At low temperatures the equilibrium state of the
system is one in which there are two coexisting phases. Under suitable choices
of space-time scalings and system parameters we first obtain (formally) a
mesoscopic kinetic Vlasov-Boltzmann equation for the one particle position and
velocity distribution functions, appropriate for a description of the phase
segregation kinetics in this system. Further scalings then yield Vlasov-Euler
and incompressible Vlasov-Navier-Stokes equations. We also obtain, via the
usual truncation of the Chapman-Enskog expansion, compressible
Vlasov-Navier-Stokes equations.Comment: TeX, 50 page
Transport in a highly asymmetric binary fluid mixture
We present molecular dynamics calculations of the thermal conductivity and
viscosities of a model colloidal suspension with colloidal particles roughly
one order of magnitude larger than the suspending liquid molecules. The results
are compared with estimates based on the Enskog transport theory and effective
medium theories (EMT) for thermal and viscous transport. We find, in
particular, that EMT remains well applicable for predicting both the shear
viscosity and thermal conductivity of such suspensions when the colloidal
particles have a ``typical'' mass, i.e. much larger than the liquid molecules.
Very light colloidal particles on the other hand yield higher thermal
conductivities, in disagreement with EMT. We also discuss the consequences of
these results to some proposed mechanisms for thermal conduction in
nanocolloidal suspensions.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Physical Review E (2007
Spinodal Decomposition in Binary Gases
We carried out three-dimensional simulations, with about 1.4 million
particles, of phase segregation in a low density binary fluid mixture,
described mesoscopically by energy and momentum conserving Boltzmann-Vlasov
equations. Using a combination of Direct Simulation Monte Carlo(DSMC) for the
short range collisions and a version of Particle-In-Cell(PIC) evolution for the
smooth long range interaction, we found dynamical scaling after the ratio of
the interface thickness(whose shape is described approximately by a hyperbolic
tangent profile) to the domain size is less than ~0.1. The scaling length R(t)
grows at late times like t^alpha, with alpha=1 for critical quenches and
alpha=1/3 for off-critical ones. We also measured the variation of temperature,
total particle density and hydrodynamic velocity during the segregation
process.Comment: 11 pages, Revtex, 4 Postscript figures, submitted to PR
Degeneracy Algorithm for Random Magnets
It has been known for a long time that the ground state problem of random
magnets, e.g. random field Ising model (RFIM), can be mapped onto the
max-flow/min-cut problem of transportation networks. I build on this approach,
relying on the concept of residual graph, and design an algorithm that I prove
to be exact for finding all the minimum cuts, i.e. the ground state degeneracy
of these systems. I demonstrate that this algorithm is also relevant for the
study of the ground state properties of the dilute Ising antiferromagnet in a
constant field (DAFF) and interfaces in random bond magnets.Comment: 17 pages(Revtex), 8 Postscript figures(5color) to appear in Phys.
Rev. E 58, December 1st (1998
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Exp6-polar thermodynamics of dense supercritical water
We introduce a simple polar fluid model for the thermodynamics of dense supercritical water based on a Buckingham (exp-6) core and point dipole representation of the water molecule. The proposed exp6-polar thermodynamics, based on ideas originally applied to dipolar hard spheres, performs very well when tested against molecular dynamics simulations. Comparisons of the model predictions with experimental data available for supercritical water yield excellent agreement for the shock Hugoniot, isotherms and sound speeds, and are also quite good for the self-diffusion constant and relative dielectric constant. We expect the present approach to be also useful for other small polar molecules and their mixtures
Phase Transition in a Vlasov-Boltzmann Binary Mixture
There are not many kinetic models where it is possible to prove bifurcation
phenomena for any value of the Knudsen number. Here we consider a binary
mixture over a line with collisions and long range repulsive interaction
between different species. It undergoes a segregation phase transition at
sufficiently low temperature. The spatially homogeneous Maxwellian equilibrium
corresponding to the mixed phase, minimizing the free energy at high
temperature, changes into a maximizer when the temperature goes below a
critical value, while non homogeneous minimizers, corresponding to coexisting
segregated phases, arise. We prove that they are dynamically stable with
respect to the Vlasov-Boltzmann evolution, while the homogeneous equilibrium
becomes dynamically unstable
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