5,075 research outputs found
Periodic forcing in viscous fingering of a nematic liquid crystal
We study viscous fingering of an air-nematic interface in a radial Hele-Shaw
cell when periodically switching on and off an electric field, which reorients
the nematic and thus changes its viscosity, as well as the surface tension and
its anisotropy (mainly enforced by a single groove in the cell). We observe
undulations at the sides of the fingers which correlate with the switching
frequency and with tip oscillations which give maximal velocity to smallest
curvatures. These lateral undulations appear to be decoupled from spontaneous
(noise-induced) side branching. We conclude that the lateral undulations are
generated by successive relaxations between two limiting finger widths. The
change between these two selected pattern scales is mainly due to the change in
the anisotropy. This scenario is confirmed by numerical simulations in the
channel geometry, using a phase-field model for anisotropic viscous fingering.Comment: completely rewritten version, more clear exposition of results (14
pages in Revtex + 7 eps figures
Towards a quantitative phase-field model of two-phase solidification
We construct a diffuse-interface model of two-phase solidification that
quantitatively reproduces the classic free boundary problem on solid-liquid
interfaces in the thin-interface limit. Convergence tests and comparisons with
boundary integral simulations of eutectic growth show good accuracy for
steady-state lamellae, but the results for limit cycles depend on the interface
thickness through the trijunction behavior. This raises the fundamental issue
of diffuse multiple-junction dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Better final discussion. 1 reference adde
β-decay half-lives and β-delayed neutron emission probabilities for several isotopes of Au, Hg, Tl, Pb, and Bi, beyond N = 126
Background: There have been measurements on roughly 230 nuclei that are β-delayed neutron emitters. They
range from 8
He up to 150La. Apart from 210Tl, with a branching ratio of only 0.007%, no other neutron emitter
has been measured beyond A = 150. Therefore, new data are needed, particularly in the region of heavy nuclei
around N = 126, in order to guide theoretical models and help understand the formation of the third r-process
peak at A ∼ 195.
Purpose: To measure both β-decay half-lives and neutron branching ratios of several neutron-rich Au, Hg, Tl,
Pb, and Bi isotopes beyond N = 126.
Method: Ions of interest were produced by fragmentation of a 238U beam, selected and identified via the GSI-FRS
fragment separator. A stack of segmented silicon detectors (SIMBA) was used to measure ion implants and β
decays. An array of 30 3
He tubes embedded in a polyethylene matrix (BELEN) was used to detect neutrons with
high efficiency and selectivity. A self-triggered digital system is employed to acquire data and to enable time
correlations. The latter were analyzed with an analytical model and results for the half-lives and neutron-branching
ratios were derived by using the binned maximum-likelihood method.
Results: Twenty new β-decay half-lives are reported for 204−206Au, 208–211Hg,
211–216Tl,
215–218Pb, and 218–220Bi,
nine of them for the first time. Neutron emission probabilities are reported for 210,211Hg and 211–216Tl.
Conclusions: The new β-decay half-lives are in good agreement with previous measurements on nuclei in this
region. The measured neutron emission probabilities are comparable to or smaller than values predicted by global
models such as relativistic Hartree Bogoliubov plus the relativistic quasi-particle random phase approximation
(RHB + RQRPA).Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad-FPA2011- 28770-C03-03, FPA2008-04972-C03-3, AIC-D2011-0705, FPA2011-24553, FPA2008-6419, FPA2010-17142, FPA2014-52823-C2-1-P, FPA2014- 52823-C2-2-P, and CPAN CSD-2007-00042 (Ingenio2010)Program Severo Ochoa-SEV-2014-0398German Helmholtz Association (Young Investigators)-VH-NG 627 (LISA-Lifetime Spectroscopy for Astrophysics)Nuclear Astrophysics Virtual Institute-VH-VI-417German Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung-06MT7178 / 05P12WOFNFSpanish Nuclear Security Council (CSN)-Catedra ArgosUK Science & Technology Facilities Council (STFC)-ST/F012012/
Viscous fingering in liquid crystals: Anisotropy and morphological transitions
We show that a minimal model for viscous fingering with a nematic liquid
crystal in which anisotropy is considered to enter through two different
viscosities in two perpendicular directions can be mapped to a two-fold
anisotropy in the surface tension. We numerically integrate the dynamics of the
resulting problem with the phase-field approach to find and characterize a
transition between tip-splitting and side-branching as a function of both
anisotropy and dimensionless surface tension. This anisotropy dependence could
explain the experimentally observed (reentrant) transition as temperature and
applied pressure are varied. Our observations are also consistent with previous
experimental evidence in viscous fingering within an etched cell and
simulations of solidification.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to PR
Phase-field approach to heterogeneous nucleation
We consider the problem of heterogeneous nucleation and growth. The system is
described by a phase field model in which the temperature is included through
thermal noise. We show that this phase field approach is suitable to describe
homogeneous as well as heterogeneous nucleation starting from several general
hypotheses. Thus we can investigate the influence of grain boundaries,
localized impurities, or any general kind of imperfections in a systematic way.
We also put forward the applicability of our model to study other physical
situations such as island formation, amorphous crystallization, or
recrystallization.Comment: 8 pages including 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical
Review
A phase-field model of Hele-Shaw flows in the high viscosity contrast regime
A one-sided phase-field model is proposed to study the dynamics of unstable
interfaces of Hele-Shaw flows in the high viscosity contrast regime. The
corresponding macroscopic equations are obtained by means of an asymptotic
expansion from the phase-field model. Numerical integrations of the phase-field
model in a rectangular Hele-Shaw cell reproduce finger competition with the
final evolution to a steady state finger the width of which goes to one half of
the channel width as the velocity increases
Phase-field model for Hele-Shaw flows with arbitrary viscosity contrast. II. Numerical study
We implement a phase-field simulation of the dynamics of two fluids with
arbitrary viscosity contrast in a rectangular Hele-Shaw cell. We demonstrate
the use of this technique in different situations including the linear regime,
the stationary Saffman-Taylor fingers and the multifinger competition dynamics,
for different viscosity contrasts. The method is quantitatively tested against
analytical predictions and other numerical results. A detailed analysis of
convergence to the sharp interface limit is performed for the linear dispersion
results. We show that the method may be a useful alternative to more
traditional methods.Comment: 13 pages in revtex, 5 PostScript figures. changes: 1 reference added,
figs. 4 and 5 rearrange
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