4 research outputs found
Vapour-liquid coexistence in many-body dissipative particle dynamics
Many-body dissipative particle dynamics is constructed to exhibit
vapour-liquid coexistence, with a sharp interface, and a vapour phase of
vanishingly small density. In this form, the model is an unusual example of a
soft-sphere liquid with a potential energy built out of local-density dependent
one-particle self energies. The application to fluid mechanics problems
involving free surfaces is illustrated by simulation of a pendant drop.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, revtex
Three-dimensional lattice-Boltzmann simulations of critical spinodal decomposition in binary immiscible fluids
We use a modified Shan-Chen, noiseless lattice-BGK model for binary
immiscible, incompressible, athermal fluids in three dimensions to simulate the
coarsening of domains following a deep quench below the spinodal point from a
symmetric and homogeneous mixture into a two-phase configuration. We find the
average domain size growing with time as , where increases
in the range , consistent with a crossover between
diffusive and hydrodynamic viscous, , behaviour. We find
good collapse onto a single scaling function, yet the domain growth exponents
differ from others' works' for similar values of the unique characteristic
length and time that can be constructed out of the fluid's parameters. This
rebuts claims of universality for the dynamical scaling hypothesis. At early
times, we also find a crossover from to in the scaled structure
function, which disappears when the dynamical scaling reasonably improves at
later times. This excludes noise as the cause for a behaviour, as
proposed by others. We also observe exponential temporal growth of the
structure function during the initial stages of the dynamics and for
wavenumbers less than a threshold value.Comment: 45 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review