16,782 research outputs found

    Wetting, roughness and hydrodynamic slip

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    The hydrodynamic slippage at a solid-liquid interface is currently at the center of our understanding of fluid mechanics. For hundreds of years this science has relied upon no-slip boundary conditions at the solid-liquid interface that has been applied successfully to model many macroscopic experiments, and the state of this interface has played a minor role in determining the flow. However, the problem is not that simple and has been revisited recently. Due to the change in the properties of the interface, such as wettability and roughness, this classical boundary condition could be violated, leading to a hydrodynamic slip. In this chapter, we review recent advances in the understanding and expectations for the hydrodynamic boundary conditions in different situations, by focussing mostly on key papers from past decade. We highlight mostly the impact of hydrophobicity, roughness, and especially their combination on the flow properties. In particular, we show that hydrophobic slippage can be dramatically affected by the presence of roughness, by inducing novel hydrodynamic phenomena, such as giant interfacial slip, superfluidity, mixing, and low hydrodynamic drag. Promising directions for further research are also discussed.Comment: 36 pages, 19 figures. This chapter would be a part of "Nanoscale liquid interfaces" boo

    Reevaluation of Neutron Electric Dipole Moment with QCD Sum Rules

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    We study the neutron electric dipole moment in the presence of the CP-violating operators up to the dimension five in terms of the QCD sum rules. It is found that the OPE calculation is robust when exploiting a particular interpolating field for neutron, while there exist some uncertainties on the phenomenological side. By using input parameters obtained from the lattice calculation, we derive a conservative limit for the contributions of the CP violating operators. We also show the detail of the derivation of the sum rules.Comment: 33 pages, 5 figure

    Rare decays at LHCb

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    05 - LHCbRare loop-induced decays are sensitive to New Physics in many Standard Model extensions. In this paper we discuss the reconstruction of the radiative penguin decays mathrmB0rightarrowmathrmK0gamma{mathrm{B^0}} rightarrow {mathrm{K}^{*0}}gamma, mathrmBmathrms0rightarrowphigamma{mathrm{B^0_{mathrm{s}}}} rightarrow phi gamma, mathrmB0rightarrowomegagamma{mathrm{B^0}} rightarrow omega gamma, the electroweak penguin decay mathrmB0rightarrowmathrmK0mu+mu{mathrm{B^0}}r ightarrow {mathrm{K}^{*0}}mu^+mu^-, the gluonic penguin decays mathrmB0rightarrowmathrmKS0phi{mathrm{B^0}} rightarrow {mathrm{K^0_S}}phi, mathrmBmathrms0rightarrowphiphi{mathrm{B^0_{mathrm{s}}}}r ightarrow phi phi and the decay mathrmBmathrms0rightarrowmu+mu{mathrm{B^0_{mathrm{s}}}} rightarrow mu^+ mu^- at LHCb. The selection criteria, evaluated efficiencies, expected annual yields and mathcalB/mathcalSmathcal{B}/mathcal{S} estimates are presented

    Light-cone sum rules for the NγΔN\gamma\Delta transitions for real photons

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    We examine the radiative ΔγN\Delta \to \gamma N transition at the real photon point Q2=0Q^2=0 using the framework of light-cone QCD sum rules. In particular, the sum rules for the transition form factors GM(0)G_M(0) and REMR_{EM} are determined up to twist 4. The result for GM(0)G_M(0) agrees with experiment within 10% accuracy. The agreement for REMR_{EM} is also reasonable. In addition, we derive new light-cone sum rules for the magnetic moments of nucleons, with a complete account of twist-4 corrections based on a recent reanalysis of photon distribution amplitudes.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures, revised version, published in Phys. Rev. D, one misplaced reference correcte

    Water Economy Program Evaluation with Respect to Total Losses Expected

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    Given the management goal of minimizing the total losses that occur within the existing construction and design of a water economy system, particular problem of water economy development is stated and solved numerically. The paper is a continuation of a study in complex water economy planning (RR-75-27). As before, it is assumed that the planning process is consistent with the following procedures: formulation of all development alternatives considered, calculation of all alternative development programs, and water economy damage estimation for each alternative development program. The problem of total loss minimization is a particular case of a general problem statement. It allows one to reduce the latter two planning procedures to a single one and solve it effectively. With this approach it is possible to simultaneously obtain solutions to both short-term control and long-term development strategy for a given water economy system

    Drag force on a sphere moving towards an anisotropic super-hydrophobic plane

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    We analyze theoretically a high-speed drainage of liquid films squeezed between a hydrophilic sphere and a textured super-hydrophobic plane, that contains trapped gas bubbles. A super-hydrophobic wall is characterized by parameters LL (texture characteristic length), b1b_1 and b2b_2 (local slip lengths at solid and gas areas), and ϕ1\phi_1 and ϕ2\phi_2 (fractions of solid and gas areas). Hydrodynamic properties of the plane are fully expressed in terms of the effective slip-length tensor with eigenvalues that depend on texture parameters and HH (local separation). The effect of effective slip is predicted to decrease the force as compared with expected for two hydrophilic surfaces and described by the Taylor equation. The presence of additional length scales, LL, b1b_1 and b2b_2, implies that a film drainage can be much richer than in case of a sphere moving towards a hydrophilic plane. For a large (compared to LL) gap the reduction of the force is small, and for all textures the force is similar to expected when a sphere is moving towards a smooth hydrophilic plane that is shifted down from the super-hydrophobic wall. The value of this shift is equal to the average of the eigenvalues of the slip-length tensor. By analyzing striped super-hydrophobic surfaces, we then compute the correction to the Taylor equation for an arbitrary gap. We show that at thinner gap the force reduction becomes more pronounced, and that it depends strongly on the fraction of the gas area and local slip lengths. For small separations we derive an exact equation, which relates a correction for effective slip to texture parameters. Our analysis provides a framework for interpreting recent force measurements in the presence of super-hydrophobic surface.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PRE; EPAPS file include

    Effective slip in pressure-driven flow past super-hydrophobic stripes

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    Super-hydrophobic array of grooves containing trapped gas (stripes), have the potential to greatly reduce drag and enhance mixing phenomena in microfluidic devices. Recent work has focused on idealized cases of stick-perfect slip stripes, with limited guidance. Here, we analyze the experimentally relevant situation of a pressure-driven flow past striped slip-stick surfaces with arbitrary local slip at the gas sectors. We derive analytical formulas for maximal (longitudinal) and minimal (transverse) directional effective slip lengths that can be used for any surface slip fraction (validated by numerical calculations). By representing eigenvalues of the slip length-tensor, they allow us to obtain the effective slip for any orientation of stripes with respect to the mean flow. Our results imply that flow past stripes is controlled by the ratio of the local slip length to texture size. In case of a large (compared to the texture period) slip at the gas areas, surface anisotropy leads to a tensorial effective slip, by attaining the values predicted earlier for a perfect local slip. Both effective slip lengths and anisotropy of the flow decrease when local slip becomes of the order of texture period. In the case of small slip, we predict simple surface-averaged, isotropic flows (independent of orientation). These results provide a framework for the rational design of super-hydrophobic surfaces and devices.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, revised versio

    Hydrodynamic interaction with super-hydrophobic surfaces

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    Patterned surfaces with large effective slip lengths, such as super-hydrophobic surfaces containing trapped gas bubbles, have the potential to reduce hydrodynamic drag. Based on lubrication theory, we analyze an approach of a hydrophilic disk to such a surface. The drag force is predicted analytically and formulated in terms of a correction function to the Reynolds equation, which is shown to be the harmonic mean of corrections expressed through effective slip lengths in the two principal (fastest and slowest) orthogonal directions. The reduction of drag is especially pronounced for a thin (compared to texture period) gap. It is not really sensitive to the pattern geometry, but depends strongly on the fraction of the gas phase and local slip length at the gas area.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure

    Wetting, roughness and flow boundary conditions

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    We discuss how the wettability and roughness of a solid impacts its hydrodynamic properties. We see in particular that hydrophobic slippage can be dramatically affected by the presence of roughness. Owing to the development of refined methods for setting very well-controlled micro- or nanotextures on a solid, these effects are being exploited to induce novel hydrodynamic properties, such as giant interfacial slip, superfluidity, mixing, and low hydrodynamic drag, that could not be achieved without roughness.Comment: 28 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication in Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte
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