46 research outputs found
Relaxation of Chemical Reactions to Stationary States in the Chemical Affinities Space
Using the mass balance equations for chemical reactions, we show how the
system relaxes towards a steady state in and out of the Onsager region. In the
chemical affinities space, after fast transients, the relaxation process is a
straight line when operating in the Onsager region, while out of this regime,
the evolution of the system is such that the projections of the evolution
equations for the forces and the shortest path on the flows coincide. For
spatially-extended systems, similar results are valid for the evolution of the
thermodynamic mode (i.e., the mode with wave-number k = 0). These results allow
us to obtain the expression for the affine connection of the space covered by
the thermodynamic forces, close to the steady states. Through the affine
connection, the nonlinear closure equations are derived.Comment: 23 pages
Covariant Hamiltonian Field Theory
A consistent, local coordinate formulation of covariant Hamiltonian field
theory is presented. Whereas the covariant canonical field equations are
equivalent to the Euler-Lagrange field equations, the covariant canonical
transformation theory offers more general means for defining mappings that
preserve the form of the field equations than the usual Lagrangian description.
It is proved that Poisson brackets, Lagrange brackets, and canonical 2-forms
exist that are invariant under canonical transformations of the fields. The
technique to derive transformation rules for the fields from generating
functions is demonstrated by means of various examples. In particular, it is
shown that the infinitesimal canonical transformation furnishes the most
general form of Noether's theorem. We furthermore specify the generating
function of an infinitesimal space-time step that conforms to the field
equations.Comment: 93 pages, no figure
Non-equilibrium Thermodynamics: Structural Relaxation, Fictive temperature and Tool-Narayanaswamy phenomenology in Glasses
Starting from the second law of thermodynamics applied to an isolated system
consisting of the system surrounded by an extremely large medium, we formulate
a general non-equilibrium thermodynamic description of the system when it is
out of equilibrium. We then apply it to study the structural relaxation in
glasses and establish the phenomenology behind the concept of the fictive
temperature and of the empirical Tool-Narayanaswamy equation on firmer
theoretical foundation.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figur
Thermodynamic Field Theory with the Iso-Entropic Formalism
A new formulation of the thermodynamic field theory (TFT) is presented. In
this new version, one of the basic restriction in the old theory, namely a
closed-form solution for the thermodynamic field strength, has been removed. In
addition, the general covariance principle is replaced by Prigogine's
thermodynamic covariance principle (TCP). The introduction of TCP required the
application of an appropriate mathematical formalism, which has been referred
to as the iso-entropic formalism. The validity of the Glansdorff-Prigogine
Universal Criterion of Evolution, via geometrical arguments, is proven. A new
set of thermodynamic field equations, able to determine the nonlinear
corrections to the linear ("Onsager") transport coefficients, is also derived.
The geometry of the thermodynamic space is non-Riemannian tending to be
Riemannian for hight values of the entropy production. In this limit, we obtain
again the same thermodynamic field equations found by the old theory.
Applications of the theory, such as transport in magnetically confined plasmas,
materials submitted to temperature and electric potential gradients or to
unimolecular triangular chemical reactions can be found at references cited
herein.Comment: 35 page
Two-fermion relativistic bound states in Light-Front Dynamics
In the Light-Front Dynamics, the wave function equations and their numerical
solutions, for two fermion bound systems, are presented. Analytical expressions
for the ladder one-boson exchange interaction kernels corresponding to scalar,
pseudoscalar, pseudovector and vector exchanges are given. Different couplings
are analyzed separately and each of them is found to exhibit special features.
The results are compared with the non relativistic solutions.Comment: 40 pages, to be published in Phys. Rev. C, .tar.gz fil
Predicting phase equilibria in polydisperse systems
Many materials containing colloids or polymers are polydisperse: They
comprise particles with properties (such as particle diameter, charge, or
polymer chain length) that depend continuously on one or several parameters.
This review focusses on the theoretical prediction of phase equilibria in
polydisperse systems; the presence of an effectively infinite number of
distinguishable particle species makes this a highly nontrivial task. I first
describe qualitatively some of the novel features of polydisperse phase
behaviour, and outline a theoretical framework within which they can be
explored. Current techniques for predicting polydisperse phase equilibria are
then reviewed. I also discuss applications to some simple model systems
including homopolymers and random copolymers, spherical colloids and
colloid-polymer mixtures, and liquid crystals formed from rod- and plate-like
colloidal particles; the results surveyed give an idea of the rich
phenomenology of polydisperse phase behaviour. Extensions to the study of
polydispersity effects on interfacial behaviour and phase separation kinetics
are outlined briefly.Comment: 48 pages, invited topical review for Journal of Physics: Condensed
Matter; uses Institute of Physics style file iopart.cls (included