1,605 research outputs found
Diffusion and rheology in a model of glassy materials
We study self-diffusion within a simple hopping model for glassy materials.
(The model is Bouchaud's model of glasses [J.-P. Bouchaud, J. Physique I 2,
1705 (1992)], as extended to describe rheological properties [P. Sollich, F.
Lequeux, P. Hebraud and M.E. Cates, Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 2020 (1997)].) We
investigate the breakdown, near the glass transition, of the (generalized)
Stokes-Einstein relation between self-diffusion of a tracer particle and the
(frequency-dependent) viscosity of the system as a whole. This stems from the
presence of a broad distribution of relaxation times of which different moments
control diffusion and rheology. We also investigate the effect of flow
(oscillatory shear) on self-diffusion and show that this causes a finite
diffusivity in the temperature regime below the glass transition (where this
was previously zero). At higher temperatures the diffusivity is enhanced by a
power law frequency dependence that also characterises the rheological
response. The relevance of these findings to soft glassy materials (foams,
emulsions etc.) as well as to conventional glass-forming liquids is discussed.Comment: 39 page (double spaced), 2 figure
Thermal fluctuations in the lattice Boltzmann method for non-ideal fluids
We introduce thermal fluctuations in the lattice Boltzmann method for
non-ideal fluids. A fluctuation-dissipation theorem is derived within the
Langevin framework and applied to a specific lattice Boltzmann model that
approximates the linearized fluctuating Navier-Stokes equations for fluids
based on square-gradient free energy functionals. The obtained thermal noise is
shown to ensure equilibration of all degrees of freedom in a simulation to high
accuracy. Furthermore, we demonstrate that satisfactory results for most
practical applications of fluctuating hydrodynamics can already be achieved
using thermal noise derived in the long wavelength-limit.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Role of Metastable States in Phase Ordering Dynamics
We show that the rate of separation of two phases of different densities
(e.g. gas and solid) can be radically altered by the presence of a metastable
intermediate phase (e.g. liquid). Within a Cahn-Hilliard theory we study the
growth in one dimension of a solid droplet from a supersaturated gas. A moving
interface between solid and gas phases (say) can, for sufficient (transient)
supersaturation, unbind into two interfaces separated by a slab of metastable
liquid phase. We investigate the criteria for unbinding, and show that it may
strongly impede the growth of the solid phase.Comment: 4 pages, Latex, Revtex, epsf. Updated two reference
Dilatancy, Jamming, and the Physics of Granulation
Granulation is a process whereby a dense colloidal suspension is converted
into pasty granules (surrounded by air) by application of shear. Central to the
stability of the granules is the capillary force arising from the interfacial
tension between solvent and air. This force appears capable of maintaining a
solvent granule in a jammed solid state, under conditions where the same amount
of solvent and colloid could also exist as a flowable droplet. We argue that in
the early stages of granulation the physics of dilatancy, which requires that a
powder expand on shearing, is converted by capillary forces into the physics of
arrest. Using a schematic model of colloidal arrest under stress, we speculate
upon various jamming and granulation scenarios. Some preliminary experimental
results on aspects of granulation in hard-sphere colloidal suspensions are also
reported.Comment: Original article intended for J Phys Cond Mat special issue on
Granular Materials (M Nicodemi, Ed.
Colloidal Jamming at Interfaces: a Route to Fluid-bicontinuous Gels
Colloidal particles or nanoparticles, with equal affinity for two fluids, are
known to adsorb irreversibly to the fluid-fluid interface. We present
large-scale computer simulations of the demixing of a binary solvent containing
such particles. The newly formed interface sequesters the colloidal particles;
as the interface coarsens, the particles are forced into close contact by
interfacial tension. Coarsening is dramatically curtailed, and the jammed
colloidal layer seemingly enters a glassy state, creating a multiply connected,
solid-like film in three dimensions. The resulting gel contains percolating
domains of both fluids, with possible uses as, for example, a microreaction
medium
Run-and-tumble particles with hydrodynamics: sedimentation, trapping and upstream swimming
We simulate by lattice Boltzmann the nonequilibrium steady states of
run-and-tumble particles (inspired by a minimal model of bacteria), interacting
by far-field hydrodynamics, subject to confinement. Under gravity, hydrodynamic
interactions barely perturb the steady state found without them, but for
particles in a harmonic trap such a state is quite changed if the run length is
larger than the confinement length: a self-assembled pump is formed. Particles
likewise confined in a narrow channel show a generic upstream flux in
Poiseuille flow: chiral swimming is not required
Nonequilibrium steady states in sheared binary fluids
We simulate by lattice Boltzmann the steady shearing of a binary fluid
mixture undergoing phase separation with full hydrodynamics in two dimensions.
Contrary to some theoretical scenarios, a dynamical steady state is attained
with finite domain lengths in the directions ( of velocity and
velocity gradient. Apparent scaling exponents are estimated as
and . We discuss
the relative roles of diffusivity and hydrodynamics in attaining steady state.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Instability and spatiotemporal rheochaos in a shear-thickening fluid model
We model a shear-thickening fluid that combines a tendency to form
inhomogeneous, shear-banded flows with a slow relaxational dynamics for fluid
microstructure. The interplay between these factors gives rich dynamics, with
periodic regimes (oscillating bands, travelling bands, and more complex
oscillations) and spatiotemporal rheochaos. These phenomena, arising from
constitutive nonlinearity not inertia, can occur even when the steady-state
flow curve is monotonic. Our model also shows rheochaos in a low-dimensional
truncation where sharply defined shear bands cannot form
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