28 research outputs found
Capillary Waves at Liquid/Vapor Interfaces: A Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Evidence for capillary waves at a liquid/vapor interface are presented from
extensive molecular dynamics simulations of a system containing up to 1.24
million Lennard-Jones particles. Careful measurements show that the total
interfacial width depends logarithmically on , the length of the
simulation cell parallel to the interface, as predicted theoretically. The
strength of the divergence of the interfacial width on depends
inversely on the surface tension . This allows us to measure
two ways since can also be obtained from the difference in the
pressure parallel and perpendicular to the interface. These two independent
measures of agree provided that the interfacial order parameter
profile is fit to an error function and not a hyperbolic tangent, as often
assumed. We explore why these two common fitting functions give different
results for
Introducing Variable Cell Shape Methods in Field Theory Simulations of Polymers
We propose a new method for carrying out field-theoretic simulations of
polymer systems under conditions of prescribed external stress, allowing for
shape changes in the simulation box. A compact expression for the deviatoric
stress tensor is derived in terms of the chain propagator, and is used to
monitor changes in the box shape according to a simple relaxation scheme. The
method allows fully relaxed, stress free configurations to be obtained even in
non trivial morphologies, and enables the study of morphology transitions
induced by external stresses
Metastable lifetimes in a kinetic Ising model: Dependence on field and system size
The lifetimes of metastable states in kinetic Ising ferromagnets are studied
by droplet theory and Monte Carlo simulation, in order to determine their
dependences on applied field and system size. For a wide range of fields, the
dominant field dependence is universal for local dynamics and has the form of
an exponential in the inverse field, modified by universal and nonuniversal
power-law prefactors. Quantitative droplet-theory predictions are numerically
verified, and small deviations are shown to depend nonuniversally on the
details of the dynamics. We identify four distinct field intervals in which the
field dependence and statistical properties of the lifetimes are different. The
field marking the crossover between the weak-field regime, in which the decay
is dominated by a single droplet, and the intermediate-field regime, in which
it is dominated by a finite droplet density, vanishes logarithmically with
system size. As a consequence the slow decay characteristic of the former
regime may be observable in systems that are macroscopic as far as their
equilibrium properties are concerned.Comment: 18 pages single spaced. RevTex Version 3. FSU-SCRI-94-1
Phase Behavior of Tapered Diblock Copolymers from Self-Consistent Field Theory
Tapered diblock copolymers are similar
to AB diblock copolymers, but the sharp junction between the A and
B blocks is replaced with a gradient region in which composition varies
from mostly A to mostly B along its length. The A side of the taper
can be attached to the A block (normal) or the B block (inverse).
We demonstrate how taper length and direction affect the phase diagrams
and density profiles using self-consistent field theory. Adding tapers
shifts the order–disorder transition to lower temperature versus
the diblock, and this effect is larger for longer tapers and for inverse
tapers. However, tapered systems’ phase diagrams and interfacial
profiles do not simply match those of diblocks at a shifted effective
temperature. For instance, we find that normal tapering widens the
bicontinuous gyroid region of the phase diagram, while inverse tapering
narrows this region, apparently due to differences in polymer organization
at the interfaces