319 research outputs found

    Liquid-Liquid Phase Separation in an Elastic Network

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    Living and engineered systems rely on the stable coexistence of two interspersed liquid phases. Yet surface tension drives their complete separation. Here we show that stable droplets of uniform and tuneable size can be produced through arrested phase separation in an elastic matrix. Starting with an elastic polymer network swollen by a solvent mixture, we change the temperature or composition to drive demixing. Droplets nucleate and grow to a stable size that is tuneable by the network cross-linking density, the cooling rate, and the composition of the solvent mixture. We discuss thermodynamic and mechanical constraints on the process. In particular, we show that the threshold for macroscopic phase separation is altered by the elasticity of the polymer network, and we highlight the role of internuclear correlations in determining the droplet size and polydispersity. This phenomenon has potential applications ranging from colloid synthesis and structural colour to phase separation in biological cells.Comment: 6 figure

    A direct optical method for the study of grain boundary melting

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    The structure and evolution of grain boundaries underlies the nature of polycrystalline materials. Here we describe an experimental apparatus and light reflection technique for measuring disorder at grain boundaries in optically clear material, in thermodynamic equilibrium. The approach is demonstrated on ice bicrystals. Crystallographic orientation is measured for each ice sample. The type and concentration of impurity in the liquid can be controlled and the temperature can be continuously recorded and controlled over a range near the melting point. The general methodology is appropriate for a wide variety of materials.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, updated with minor changes made to published versio

    Polycrystallinity enhances stress build-up around ice

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    Damage caused by freezing wet, porous materials is a widespread problem, but is hard to predict or control. Here, we show that polycrystallinity makes a great difference to the stress build-up process that underpins this damage. Unfrozen water in grain-boundary grooves feeds ice growth at temperatures below the freezing temperature, leading to the fast build-up of localized stresses. The process is very variable, which we ascribe to local differences in ice-grain orientation, and to the surprising mobility of many grooves -- which further accelerates stress build-up. Our work will help understand how freezing damage occurs, and in developing accurate models and effective damage-mitigation strategies.Comment: 4 figure

    Cyclotron resonance of correlated electrons in semiconductor heterostructures

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    The cyclotron resonance absorption of two-dimensional electrons in semiconductor heterostructures in high magnetic fields is investigated. It is assumed that the ionized impurity potential is a dominant scattering mechanism, and the theory explicitly takes the Coulomb correlation effect into account through the Wigner phonons. The cyclotron resonance linewidth is in quantitative agreement with the experiment in the Wigner crystal regime at T=4.2K. Similar to the cyclotron resonance theory of the charge density waves pinned by short-range impurities, the present results for the long-range scattering also show the doubling of the resonance peaks. However, unlike the case of the charge density waves, our theory gives the pinning mode independent of the bulk compressibility of the substrate materials.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
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