3 research outputs found
Chiral sedimentation of extended objects in viscous media
We study theoretically the chirality of a generic rigid object's
sedimentation in a fluid under gravity in the low Reynolds number regime. We
represent the object as a collection of small Stokes spheres or stokeslets, and
the gravitational force as a constant point force applied at an arbitrary point
of the object. For a generic configuration of stokeslets and forcing point, the
motion takes a simple form in the nearly free draining limit where the
stokeslet radius is arbitrarily small. In this case, the internal hydrodynamic
interactions between stokeslets are weak, and the object follows a helical path
while rotating at a constant angular velocity about a fixed axis. This
is independent of initial orientation, and thus constitutes a chiral
response for the object. Even though there can be no such chiral response in
the absence of hydrodynamic interactions between the stokeslets, the angular
velocity obtains a fixed, nonzero limit as the stokeslet radius approaches
zero. We characterize empirically how depends on the placement of the
stokeslets, concentrating on three-stokeslet objects with the external force
applied far from the stokeslets. Objects with the largest are aligned
along the forcing direction. In this case, the limiting varies as the
inverse square of the minimum distance between stokeslets. We illustrate the
prevalence of this robust chiral motion with experiments on small macroscopic
objects of arbitrary shape.Comment: 35 pages, 10 figures; Section VII.A redone and other edits made for
clarity. Accepted by Phys. Rev.
Singular electrostatic energy of nanoparticle clusters
The binding of clusters of metal nanoparticles is partly electrostatic. We
address difficulties in calculating the electrostatic energy when high charging
energies limit the total charge to a single quantum, entailing unequal
potentials on the particles. We show that the energy at small separation
has a strong logarithmic dependence on . We give a general law for the
strength of this logarithmic correction in terms of a) the energy at contact
ignoring the charge quantization effects and b) an adjacency matrix specifying
which spheres of the cluster are in contact and which is charged. We verify the
theory by comparing the predicted energies for a tetrahedral cluster with an
explicit numerical calculation.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Phys Rev