104 research outputs found
Lattice Boltzmann simulations of apparent slip in hydrophobic microchannels
Various experiments have found a boundary slip in hydrophobic microchannel
flows, but a consistent understanding of the results is still lacking. While
Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations cannot reach the low shear rates and large
system sizes of the experiments, it is often impossible to resolve the needed
details with macroscopic approaches. We model the interaction between
hydrophobic channel walls and a fluid by means of a multi-phase lattice
Boltzmann model. Our mesoscopic approach overcomes the limitations of MD
simulations and can reach the small flow velocities of known experiments. We
reproduce results from experiments at small Knudsen numbers and other
simulations, namely an increase of slip with increasing liquid-solid
interactions, the slip being independent of the flow velocity, and a decreasing
slip with increasing bulk pressure. Within our model we develop a semi-analytic
approximation of the dependence of the slip on the pressure.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Simulations of slip flow on nanobubble-laden surfaces
On microstructured hydrophobic surfaces, geometrical patterns may lead to the
appearance of a superhydrophobic state, where gas bubbles at the surface can
have a strong impact on the fluid flow along such surfaces. In particular, they
can strongly influence a detected slip at the surface. We present two-phase
lattice Boltzmann simulations of a flow over structured surfaces with attached
gas bubbles and demonstrate how the detected slip depends on the pattern
geometry, the bulk pressure, or the shear rate. Since a large slip leads to
reduced friction, our results allow to assist in the optimization of
microchannel flows for large throughput.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figure
Low Friction Flows of Liquids at Nanopatterned Interfaces
With the recent important development of microfluidic systems,
miniaturization of flow devices has become a real challenge. Microchannels,
however, are characterized by a large surface to volume ratio, so that surface
properties strongly affect flow resistance in submicrometric devices. We
present here results showing that the concerted effect of wetting . properties
and surface roughness may considerably reduce friction of the fluid past the
boundaries. The slippage of the fluid at the channel boundaries is shown to be
drastically increased by using surfaces that are patterned at the nanometer
scale. This effect occurs in the regime where the surface pattern is partially
dewetted, in the spirit of the 'superhydrophobic' effects that have been
recently discovered at the macroscopic scales. Our results show for the first
time that, in contrast to the common belief, surface friction may be reduced by
surface roughness. They also open the possibility of a controlled realization
of the 'nanobubbles' that have long been suspected to play a role in
interfacial slippag
Dynamics of nanoscale droplets on moving surfaces
We use molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to investigate the dynamic wetting of nanoscale water droplets on moving surfaces. The density and hydrogen bonding profiles along the direction normal to the surface are reported, and the width of the water depletion layer is evaluated first for droplets on three different static surfaces: silicon, graphite, and a fictitious superhydrophobic surface. The advancing and receding contact angles, and contact angle hysteresis, are then measured as a function of capillary number on smooth moving silicon and graphite surfaces. Our results for the silicon surface show that molecular displacements at the contact line are influenced greatly by interactions with the solid surface and partly by viscous dissipation effects induced through the movement of the surface. For the graphite surface, however, both the advancing and receding contact angles values are close to the static contact angle value and are independent of the capillary number; i.e., viscous dissipation effects are negligible. This finding is in contrast with the wetting dynamics of macroscale water droplets, which show significant dependence on the capillary number
The RNA Polymerase PB2 Subunit of Influenza A/HongKong/156/1997 (H5N1) Restrict the Replication of Reassortant Ribonucleoprotein Complexes
BACKGROUND: Genetic reassortment plays a critical role in the generation of pandemic strains of influenza virus. The influenza virus RNA polymerase, composed of PB1, PB2 and PA subunits, has been suggested to influence the efficiency of genetic reassortment. However, the role of the RNA polymerase in the genetic reassortment is not well understood. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here, we reconstituted reassortant ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes, and demonstrated that the PB2 subunit of A/HongKong/156/1997 (H5N1) [HK PB2] dramatically reduced the synthesis of mRNA, cRNA and vRNA when introduced into the polymerase of other influenza strains of H1N1 or H3N2. The HK PB2 had no significant effect on the assembly of the polymerase trimeric complex, or on promoter binding activity or replication initiation activity in vitro. However, the HK PB2 was found to remarkably impair the accumulation of RNP. This impaired accumulation and activity of RNP was fully restored when four amino acids at position 108, 508, 524 and 627 of the HK PB2 were mutated. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Overall, we suggest that the PB2 subunit of influenza polymerase might play an important role for the replication of reassortant ribonucleoprotein complexes
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Foam flow through a transparent rough-walled rock fracture
This paper presents an experimental study of nitrogen, water, and aqueous foam flow through a transparent replica of a natural rough-walled rock fracture with a hydraulic aperture of roughly 30 {mu}m. It is established that single-phase flow of both nitrogen and water is well described by analogy to flow between parallel plates. Inertial effects caused by fracture roughness become important in single-phase flow as the Reynolds number approaches 1. Foam exhibits effective control of gas mobility. Foam flow resistances are approximately 10 to 20 times greater than those of nitrogen over foam qualities spanning from 0.60 to 0.99 indicating effective gas-mobility control. Because previous studies of foam flow have focused mainly upon unfractured porous media, little information is available about foam flow mechanisms in fractured media. The transparency of the fracture allowed flow visualization and demonstrated that foam rheology in fractured media depends upon bubble shape and size. Changes in flow behavior are directly tied to transitions in bubble morphology
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