1,977 research outputs found
Effects of Confinement on Critical Adsorption: Absence of Critical Depletion for Fluids in Slit Pores
The adsorption of a near-critical fluid confined in a slit pore is
investigated by means of density functional theory and by Monte Carlo
simulation for a Lennard-Jones fluid. Our work was stimulated by recent
experiments for SF_6 adsorbed in a mesoporous glass which showed the striking
phenomenon of critical depletion, i.e. the adsorption excess "Gamma" first
increases but then decreases very rapidly to negative values as the bulk
critical temperature T_c is approached from above along near-critical
isochores. By contrast, our density functional and simulation results, for a
range of strongly attractive wall-fluid potentials, show Gamma monotonically
increasing and eventually saturating as the temperature is lowered towards T_c
along both the critical (rho=rho_c) and sub-critical isochores (rho<\rho_c).
Such behaviour results from the increasingly slow decay of the density profile
away from the walls, into the middle of the slit, as T->T_c. For rho < rho_c we
find that in the fluid the effective bulk field, which is negative and which
favours desorption, is insufficient to dominate the effects of the surface
fields which favour adsorption. We compare this situation with earlier results
for the lattice gas model with a constant (negative) bulk field where critical
depletion was found. Qualitatively different behaviour of the density profiles
and adsorption is found in simulations for intermediate and weakly attractive
wall-fluid potentials but in no case do we observe the critical depletion found
in experiments. We conclude that the latter cannot be accounted for by a single
pore model.Comment: 21 pages Revtex. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
The fluid-fluid interface in a model colloid-polymer mixture: Application of grand canonical Monte Carlo to asymmetric binary mixtures
We present a Monte Carlo method to simulate asymmetric binary mixtures in the
grand canonical ensemble. The method is used to study the colloid-polymer model
of Asakura and Oosawa. We determine the phase diagram of the fluid-fluid
unmixing transition and the interfacial tension, both at high polymer density
and close to the critical point. We also present density profiles in the
two-phase region. The results are compared to predictions of a recent density
functional theory.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Working memory capacity is related to variations in the magnitude of an electrophysiological marker of recollection
he links between the resources available for cognitive control and the ability to recover and maintain episodic content were investigated by contrasting an ERP index of recollection (the left-parietal ERP old/new effect) with a measure of working memory capacity (WMC). Participants were given the O-Span measure of WMC and completed a retrieval task in which they had to make responses on one key to previously studied words (targets) and responses on a second key to words that were presented at retrieval on either one or two occasions (new words and non-targets, respectively). The size of the ERP index of recollection associated with correct responses to targets was correlated with WMC, a finding consistent with the view that this ERP effect is linked to operations associated with maintaining information on-line in service of task goals. In addition, the degree to which left-parietal ERP old/new effects for targets were larger than for non-targets increased as WMC increased. Larger left-parietal ERP old/new effects for targets than for non-targets have been interpreted as evidence of successful prioritisation of recollection of target information. The link with WMC reported here is consistent this view, in so far as WMC indexes the availability of resources that are necessary to exert cognitive control over memory retrieval
Effects of weak surface fields on the density profiles and adsorption of a confined fluid near bulk criticality
The density profile and Gibbs adsorption of a near-critical fluid confined
between two identical planar walls is studied by means of
Monte Carlo simulation and by density functional theory for a Lennard-Jones
fluid. By reducing the strength of wall-fluid interactions relative to
fluid-fluid interactions we observe a crossover from behaviour characteristic
of the normal surface universality class, strong critical adsorption, to
behaviour characteristic of a 'neutral' wall. The crossover is reminiscent of
that which occurs near the ordinary surface transition in Ising films subject
to vanishing surface fields. For the 'neutral' wall the density profile, away
from the walls, is almost constant throughout the slit capillary and gives rise
to an adsorption that is constant along the critical isochore. The same
'neutral' wall yields a line of capillary coexistence that is almost identical
to the bulk coexistence line. In the crossover regime we observe features in
the density profile similar to those found in the magnetisation profile of the
critical Ising film subject to weak surface fields, namely two smooth maxima,
located away from the walls, which merge into a single maximum at midpoint as
the strength of the wall-fluid interaction is reduced or as the distance
between walls is decreased. We discuss similarities and differences between the
surface critical behaviour of fluids and of Ising magnets.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figures, submitted to the Journ. Chem. Phy
Wetting transitions in polydisperse fluids
The properties of the coexisting bulk gas and liquid phases of a polydisperse
fluid depend not only on the prevailing temperature, but also on the overall
parent density. As a result, a polydisperse fluid near a wall will exhibit
density-driven wetting transitions inside the coexistence region. We propose a
likely topology for the wetting phase diagram, which we test using Monte Carlo
simulations of a model polydisperse fluid at an attractive wall, tracing the
wetting line inside the cloud curve and identifying the relationship to
prewetting.Comment: 4 Pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Liquid-vapor interface of a polydisperse fluid
We report a Grand Canonical Monte Carlo simulation study of the liquid-vapor
interface of a model fluid exhibiting polydispersity in terms of the particle
size . The bulk density distribution, , of the system
is controlled by the imposed chemical potential distribution . We
choose the latter such that assumes a Schulz form with
associated degree of polydispersity . By introducing a smooth
attractive wall, a planar liquid-vapor interface is formed for bulk state
points within the region of liquid-vapor coexistence. Owing to fractionation,
the pure liquid phase is enriched in large particles, with respect to the
coexisting vapor. We investigate how the spatial non-uniformity of the density
near the liquid-vapor interface affects the evolution of the local distribution
of particle sizes between the limiting pure phase forms. We find (as previously
predicted by density functional theory, Bellier-Castella {\em et al}, Phys.
Rev. {\bf E65}, 021503 (2002)) a segregation of smaller particles to the
interface. The magnitude of this effect is quantified for various via
measurements of the relative adsorption. Additionally, we consider the utility
of various estimators for the interfacial width and highlight the difficulties
of isolating the intrinsic contribution of polydispersity to this width.Comment: 9 pages, 10 Fig
Mitochondrial DNA haplotype diversity and origin of captive sand tiger sharks (Carcharias taurus)
The sand tiger shark (Carcharias taurus) is listed as globally vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) with geographically isolated and separated global populations with little or no gene flow between them. Captive-breeding of these sharks in aquaria would reduce the need to populate displays with wild-caught individuals; however, sand tigers are notoriously difficult to breed in captivity. In this study we analysed 520bp of the mitochondrial D-loop to assess the haplotype diversity of 19 captive sand tiger sharks from aquaria in the UK and US. Genetic material was sampled in a non-invasive fashion through DNA extracted from shed teeth. Data obtained were compared to known, geographically mapped wild haplotypes to establish whether individuals from different global populations are being housed together. Results identified the haplotype of a minimum of 10 of the 19 sharks, detecting four different haplotypes, and identifying a previously undescribed haplotype (haplotype K). A major genetic subdivision between the haplotypes of the North West Atlantic and those of other global populations has been previously shown from population genetic analyses. Our results indicate that captive sharks can be from either side of this subdivision and occasionally these can be co-housed in the same aquarium. Since sharks with highly divergent genetic ancestry are being kept together, these findings have implications for conservation efforts regarding the individual needs of sand tiger shark populations and for captive-breeding program success rates
Accurate simulation estimates of cloud points of polydisperse fluids
We describe two distinct approaches to obtaining cloud point densities and
coexistence properties of polydisperse fluid mixtures by Monte Carlo simulation
within the grand canonical ensemble. The first method determines the chemical
potential distribution (with the polydisperse attribute)
under the constraint that the ensemble average of the particle density
distribution matches a prescribed parent form. Within the region
of phase coexistence (delineated by the cloud curve) this leads to a
distribution of the fluctuating overall particle density n, p(n), that
necessarily has unequal peak weights in order to satisfy a generalized lever
rule. A theoretical analysis shows that as a consequence, finite-size
corrections to estimates of coexistence properties are power laws in the system
size. The second method assigns such that an equal peak weight
criterion is satisfied for p(n)\mu(\sigma)$. We show how to ascertain the
requisite weight factor operationally. A theoretical analysis of the second
method suggests that it leads to finite-size corrections to estimates of
coexistence properties which are {\em exponentially small} in the system size.
The scaling predictions for both methods are tested via Monte Carlo simulations
of a novel polydisperse lattice gas model near its cloud curve, the results
showing excellent quantitative agreement with the theory.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Monte Carlo cluster algorithm for fluid phase transitions in highly size-asymmetrical binary mixtures
Highly size-asymmetrical fluid mixtures arise in a variety of physical
contexts, notably in suspensions of colloidal particles to which much smaller
particles have been added in the form of polymers or nanoparticles.
Conventional schemes for simulating models of such systems are hamstrung by the
difficulty of relaxing the large species in the presence of the small one. Here
we describe how the rejection-free geometrical cluster algorithm (GCA) of Liu
and Luijten [Phys. Rev. Lett 92, 035504 (2004)] can be embedded within a
restricted Gibbs ensemble to facilitate efficient and accurate studies of fluid
phase behavior of highly size-asymmetrical mixtures. After providing a detailed
description of the algorithm, we summarize the bespoke analysis techniques of
Ashton et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 132, 074111 (2010)] that permit accurate
estimates of coexisting densities and critical-point parameters. We apply our
methods to study the liquid--vapor phase diagram of a particular mixture of
Lennard-Jones particles having a 10:1 size ratio. As the reservoir volume
fraction of small particles is increased in the range 0--5%, the critical
temperature decreases by approximately 50%, while the critical density drops by
some 30%. These trends imply that in our system, adding small particles
decreases the net attraction between large particles, a situation that
contrasts with hard-sphere mixtures where an attractive depletion force occurs.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
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