484 research outputs found
Where surface physics and fluid dynamics meet: rupture of an amphiphile layer by fluid flow
We investigate the fluctuating pattern created by a jet of fluid impingent
upon an amphiphile-covered surface. This microscopically thin layer is
initially covered with 50 m floating particles so that the layer can be
visualized. A vertical jet of water located below the surface and directed
upward drives a hole in this layer. The hole is particle-free and is surrounded
by the particle-laden amphiphile region. The jet ruptures the amphiphile layer
creating a particle-free region that is surrounded by the particle-covered
surface. The aim of the experiment is to understand the (fluctuating) shape of
the ramified interface between the particle-laden and particle-free regions.Comment: published in Journal of Chemical Physic
Bowl Shaped Cavitands Dimerize and Complex Certain Organic Guests in Organic Solvents which Themselves are Poor Guests
The syntheses and binding properties of rigidly bowl-shaped polycyclic cavitands (1—4) are reported. Attached to the four aryl rim positions of the bowls are four benzenes substituted in their para positions with four CC^Me, Br, OH or NO2 groups, which deepen the bowls. Attached to the base of the bowls are four pentyl feet, which increase the solubilities of these hosts in organic solvents. Of the four hosts, only the one containing the CO2Me groups dimerized both in the crystalline state and in solution in ten deute- rated solvents which themselves are poor guests. In three other deuterated solvents, no dimerization was observed. A crystal structure of the dimer showed that one p-MeC^CCs^ group of each monomer occupied the cavity of its complexing partner in a reciprocating double host-guest arrangement. Such a structure is compatible with the ^H-NMR spectra of the dimer in solution. The dimer was also detected in its FAB-MS. The tetrabromocavitand at low concentrations in CD2CI2 complexed MeCC^C^Me, MeCC^Me, PhCC^Me and MeCOC^CC^Me. Tetranitrocavitand 4 also complexed MeC02CH2Me in CD2CI2 as solvent
The Critical Behaviour of Potts models with symmetry breaking fields
The -state Potts model in two dimensions in the presence of external
magnetic fields is studied. For general special choices of these
magnetic fields produce effective models with smaller symmetry . The phase diagram of these models and their critical behaviour are
explored by conventional finite-size scaling and conformal invariance. The
possibility of multicritical behavior, for finite values of the symmetry
breaking fields, in the cases where is also analysed. Our results
indicate that for effective models with symmetry the
multicritical point occurs at zero field. This last result is also corroborated
by Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 15 pages (standart LaTex), 2 figure (PostScript) available by request
to [email protected]
Polar Smectic Films
We report on a new experimental procedure for forming and studying polar
smectic liquid crystal films. A free standing smectic film is put in contact
with a liquid drop, so that the film has one liquid crystal/liquid interface
and one liquid crystal/air interface. This polar environment results in changes
in the textures observed in the film, including a boojum texture and a
previously unobserved spiral texture in which the winding direction of the
spiral reverses at a finite radius from its center. Some aspects of these
textures are explained by the presence of a Ksb term in the bulk elastic free
energy density that favors a combination of splay and bend deformations.Comment: 4 pages, REVTeX, 3 figures, submitted to PR
Boojums and the Shapes of Domains in Monolayer Films
Domains in Langmuir monolayers support a texture that is the two-dimensional
version of the feature known as a boojum. Such a texture has a quantifiable
effect on the shape of the domain with which it is associated. The most
noticeable consequence is a cusp-like feature on the domain boundary. We report
the results of an experimental and theoretical investigation of the shape of a
domain in a Langmuir monolayer. A further aspect of the investigation is the
study of the shape of a ``bubble'' of gas-like phase in such a monolayer. This
structure supports a texture having the form of an inverse boojum. The
distortion of a bubble resulting from this texture is also studied. The
correspondence between theory and experiment, while not perfect, indicates that
a qualitative understanding of the relationship between textures and domain
shapes has been achieved.Comment: replaced with published version, 10 pages, 13 figures include
Theory of monolayers with boundaries: Exact results and Perturbative analysis
Domains and bubbles in tilted phases of Langmuir monolayers contain a class
of textures knows as boojums. The boundaries of such domains and bubbles may
display either cusp-like features or indentations. We derive analytic
expressions for the textures within domains and surrounding bubbles, and for
the shapes of the boundaries of these regions. The derivation is perturbative
in the deviation of the bounding curve from a circle. This method is not
expected to be accurate when the boundary suffers large distortions, but it
does provide important clues with regard to the influence of various energetic
terms on the order-parameter texture and the shape of the domain or bubble
bounding curve. We also look into the effects of thermal fluctuations, which
include a sample-size-dependent effective line tension.Comment: replaced with published version, 21 pages, 16 figures include
Hexatic Order and Surface Ripples in Spherical Geometries
In flat geometries, two dimensional hexatic order has only a minor effect on
capillary waves on a liquid substrate and on undulation modes in lipid
bilayers. However, extended bond orientational order alters the long wavelength
spectrum of these ripples in spherical geometries. We calculate this frequency
shift and suggest that it might be detectable in lipid bilayer vesicles, at the
surface of liquid metals and in multielectron bubbles in liquid helium at low
temperatures. Hexatic order also leads to a shift in the threshold for the
fission instability induced in the later two systems by an excess of electric
charge.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure; revised version; to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Avoided Critical Behavior in O(n) Systems
Long-range frustrating interactions, even if their strength is infinitesimal,
can give rise to a dramatic proliferations of ground or near-ground states. As
a consequence, the ordering temperature can exhibit a discontinuous drop as a
function of the frustration. A simple model of the doped Mott insulator, where
the short-range tendency of the holes to phase separate competes with
long-range Coulomb effects, exhibits this "avoided critical" behavior. This
model may serve as a paradigm for many other systems.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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