41 research outputs found

    Casimir-Lifshitz Force Out of Thermal Equilibrium and Asymptotic Nonadditivity

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    We investigate the force acting between two parallel plates held at different temperatures. The force reproduces, as limiting cases, the well-known Casimir-Lifshitz surface-surface force at thermal equilibrium and the surface-atom force out of thermal equilibrium recently derived by M. Antezza et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 113202 (2005). The asymptotic behavior of the force at large distances is explicitly discussed. In particular when one of the two bodies is a rarefied gas the force is not additive, being proportional to the square root of the density. Nontrivial crossover regions at large distances are also identified

    Applications of Casimir forces:Nanoscale actuation and adhesion

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    Here, we discuss possible applications of the Casimir forces in micro- and nanosystems. The main part of this paper is devoted to actuation with quantum fluctuations and to the relative contribution of van der Waals and Casimir interactions to adhesion. Switching between the amorphous and crystalline states of phase change materials could generate force contrast sufficient for actuation, though for practical applications, the influence of protective capping layers and volume compression have to be better understood. Resilience against the pull-in instability is also a critical point defined by the material choice, dissipation in the system, and roughness of the surfaces. The adhesion induced by the Casimir forces is omnipresent, and it can play a pivotal role in unwanted stiction demanding deeper understanding. The open problems are the distance upon contact and the relative area of the real contact since both of them control the adhesion. An experiment designed to answer these questions is briefly discussed

    Optimization of a Thermal Flow Sensor for Acoustic Particle Velocity Measurements

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    In this paper, a thermal flow sensor consisting of two or three heated wires, the Microflown, is treated for application to acoustic measurements. It is sensitive to flow ("particle velocity"), contrary to conventional microphones that measure acoustic pressures. A numerical analysis, allowing for detailed parametric studies, is presented. The results are experimentally verified. Consequently, improved devices were fabricated, and also sensors with a new geometry consisting of three wires, instead of the usual two, of which the central wire is relatively most heated. These devices are the best performing Microflowns to date with a frequency range extending from 0 to over 5 kHz and a minimum detectable particle velocity level of about 70 nm/s at 2 to 5 kHz (i.e., 3 dB PVL or SPL, corresponding to a pressure of 3.1/spl middot/10/sup -5/ Pa at a free field specific acoustic impedance)

    Evanescent character of the repulsive thermal Casimir force

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    The physical origin of the negative thermal correction to the Casimir force between metals is clarified. For this purpose the asymptotic behavior of the thermal Casimir force is analyzed at large and small distances in the real frequency representation. Contributions from propagating and evanescent waves are considered separately. At large distances they cancel each other in substantial degree so that only the attractive Lifshitz limit survives. At smaller separations the repulsive evanescent contribution of s-polarization dominates in the case of two metals or a metal and a high-permittivity dielectric. Common origin and order of magnitude of the repulsion in these two cases demonstrate naturalness of the controversial large thermal correction between metals.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Roughness correction to the Casimir force beyond perturbation theory

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    Up to now there has been no reliable method to calculate the Casimir force when surface roughness becomes comparable with the separation between bodies. Statistical analysis of rough Au films demonstrates rare peaks with heights considerably larger than the root-mean-square (rms) roughness. These peaks define the minimal distance between rough surfaces and can be described with extreme value statistics. We show that the contributions of high peaks to the force can be calculated independently of each other while the contribution of normal roughness can be evaluated perturbatively beyond the proximity force approximation. The developed method allows a reliable force estimation for short separations. Our model explains the strong hitherto unexplained deviation from the normal Casimir scaling observed experimentally at short separations.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to be published in EP

    Collective behavior of bulk nanobubbles produced by alternating polarity electrolysis

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    Nanobubbles in liquids are mysterious gaseous objects having exceptional stability. They promise a wide range of applications but their production is not well controlled and localized. Alternating polarity electrolysis of water is a tool that can control production of bulk nanobubbles in space and time without generating larger bubbles. Using the schlieren technique a detailed three-dimensional structure of a dense cloud of nanobubbles above the electrodes is visualized. It is demonstrated that the thermal effects produce different schlieren pattern and have different dynamics. A localized volume enriched with nanobubbles can be separated from the parent cloud and exists on its own. This volume demonstrates buoyancy from which the concentration of nanobubbles is estimated as 2x10^18 m^-3. This concentration is smaller than that in the parent cloud. Dynamic light scattering shows that the average size of nanobubbles during the process is 60-80 nm. The bubbles are observed 15 minutes after switching off the electrical pulses but their size is shifted to larger values of about 250 nm. Thus, an efficient way to generate and control nanobubbles is proposed.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, Supplemental, 3 video file

    Excessive number of high asperities for sputtered rough films

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    The roughness of solids is crucial for interactions between bodies at short separations due to capillary or van der Waals-Casimir forces and for contact mechanics. Specifically, it is critical for the fabrication and operation of microelectromechanical systems, for which functional materials are deposited using thin film coating technologies. Here, it is demonstrated that the materials deposited by magnetron sputtering or thermally evaporated on a cold Si substrate reveal a significantly larger number of high asperities than that predicted by the normal distribution. Such asperities define the distance between the solids in contact that is the key parameter for many problems. The effect is related to the nonequilibrium deposition conditions and is suppressed if the material is deposited on a hot substrate or annealed. The high asperity tails can be described by the extreme value distribution or in some cases by the exponential distribution

    Roughness correction to the Casimir force at short separations: Contact distance and extreme value statistics

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    So far there has been no reliable method to calculate the Casimir force at separations comparable to the root-mean-square of the height fluctuations of the surfaces. Statistical analysis of rough gold samples has revealed the presence of peaks considerably higher than the root-mean-square roughness. These peaks redefine the minimum separation distance between the bodies and can be described by extreme value statistics. Here we show that the contribution of the high peaks to the Casimir force can be calculated with a pairwise additive summation, while the contribution of asperities with normal height can be evaluated perturbatively. This method provides a reliable estimate of the Casimir force at short distances, and it solves the significant, so far unexplained discrepancy between measurements of the Casimir force between rough surfaces and the results of perturbation theory. Furthermore, we illustrate the importance of our results in a technologically relevant situation.Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Explosion of microbubbles generated by the alternating polarity water electrolysis

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    Water electrolysis with a fast change of polarity generates a high concentration of bulk nanobubbles containing H2 and O2 gases. When this concentration reaches a critical value, a microbubble pops up, which is terminated quickly in an explosion process. In this paper, we provide experimental information on the phenomenon concentrating on the dynamics of exploding microbubble observed from the top and from the side. An initial bubble with a size of 150 μm expands to a maximum size of 1200 μm for 150 μs and then shrinks in the cavitation process. The sound produced by the event is coming from two sources separated in time: exploding bubble and cavitating bubble. The observed dynamics supports expansion of the bubble with steam but not with H2 and O2 mixture. A qualitative model of this puzzling phenomenon proposed earlier is refined. It is demonstrated that the pressure and temperature in the initial bubble can be evaluated using only the energy conservation law for which the driving energy is the energy of the combusted gas. The temperature in the bubble reaches 200 °C that shows that the process cannot be ignited by standard combustion, but the surface-assisted spontaneous combustion agrees well with the observations and theoretical estimates. The pressure in the microbubble varies with the size of the merging nanobubbles and is evaluated as 10-20 bar. Large pressure difference between the bubble and liquid drives the bubble expansion, and is the source of the sound produced by the process. Exploding microbubbles are a promising principle to drive fast and strong micropumps for microfluidic and other applications
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