129 research outputs found
Instability onset and scaling laws of an autooscillating turbulent flow in a complex plasma
We study a complex plasma under microgravity conditions that is first
stabilized with an oscillating electric field. Once the stabilization is
stopped, the so-called heartbeat instability develops. We study how the kinetic
energy spectrum changes during and after the onset of the instability and
compare with the double cascade predicted by Kraichnan and Leith for
two-dimensional turbulence. The onset of the instability manifests clearly in
the ratio of the reduced rates of cascade of energy and enstrophy and in the
power-law exponents of the energy spectra.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Kinetics of spreading over porous substrate
The spreading of small liquid drops over thin and thick porous layers (dry or saturated with
the same liquid) has been investigated in the case of both complete wetting (silicone oils of
different viscosities) and partial wetting (aqueous SDS solutions of different concentrations).
Consideration has been carried out from both experimental and theoretical points of view.
Nitrocellulose membranes of different porosity and averaged pore size were used as a model of
thin porous layers, glass and metal filters were used as a model of thick porous substrates.
It has been shown, that the spreading process follows the power law in time in the case of
spreading of silicon oil drops over porous substrate saturated with the same oil. The liquid flow
in the spreading drop has been matched with the flow in the porous substrate. Both the exponent
and the pre-exponential factor of the power law have been predicted and compared with our
experimental data, which shows the good agreement. An effective lubrication coefficient has
been introduced, which accounts for an effective slippage of liquids over porous substrates. This
coefficient has been both theoretically predicted and experimentally verified. [Continues.
Effect of strong wakes on waves in two-dimensional plasma crystals
We study effects of the particle-wake interactions on the dispersion and
polarization of dust lattice wave modes in two-dimensional plasma crystals.
Most notably, the wake-induced coupling between the modes causes the branches
to "attract" each other, and their polarizations become elliptical. Upon the
mode hybridization the major axes of the ellipses (remaining mutually
orthogonal) rotate by . To demonstrate importance of the obtained
results for experiments, we plot spectral densities of the longitudinal and
transverse waves revealing distinct fingerprints of the mixed polarization.
Furthermore, we show that at strong coupling the hybrid mode is significantly
shifted towards smaller wave numbers, away from the border of the first
Brillouin zone (where the hybrid mode is localized for a weak coupling).Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Hexakis(dimethylformamide)bis(hexaphenylcyclohexasiloxanehexaolato)hexacopper(II) Dimethylformamide Solvate
The sandwich-like title complex, hexakis(dimethylformamide)-1O,2O,3O,4O,5O,6O-bis[2,4,6,8,10,12-hexaphenylsiloxane-2,4,6,8,10,12-hexaolato(6-)-1:22O1,2:32O2,3:42O3,- 4:52O4,5:62O5,1:62O6]hexacopper(II) tetrakis(dimethylformamide) solvate, [Cu6(C3H7NO)6{(C6H5)6O12Si6}2].4C3H7NO, is comprised of two regular crown-shaped macrocyclic hexadentate organosiloxanolate ligands chelating a flat Cu6 hexagon, as in the ethanol-solvated analogue investigated previously. The title complex has a more distorted shape than the trigonal ethanol-solvated analogue, being slightly side-oblated, but still contains a large empty inner channel accessible by small molecules (the diameter of the free cross-section being about 2.5 Ã…). Each CuII ion has square-pyramidal coordination with four basal siloxanolate O atoms and an apical dimethylformamide (DMFA) molecule (coordinated through its carbonyl group). The average bond lengths are: Cu-O(Si) 1.964 (11) Ã… and Cu-O(DMFA) 2.215 (10) Ã…. The structure contains four additional DMFA molecules per complex unit, linked by weak C-HO hydrogen bonds. Unexpectedly, the C=O bond length is longer [1.248 (10) and 1.255 (9) Ã…] in the uncoordinated DMFA molecules than in the coordinated [1.214-1.227 (7) Ã…]
Channeling of particles and associated anomalous transport in a 2D complex plasma crystal
Implications of recently discovered effect of channeling of upstream extra
particles for transport phenomena in a two-dimensional plasma crystal are
discussed. Upstream particles levitated above the lattice layer and tended to
move between the rows of lattice particles. An example of heat transport is
considered, where upstream particles act as moving heat sources, which may lead
to anomalous heat transport. The average channeling length observed was 15 - 20
interparticle distances. New features of the channeling process are also
reported
Wake-mediated propulsion of an upstream particle in two-dimensional plasma crystals
The wake-mediated propulsion of an "extra" particle in a channel of two
neighboring rows of a two-dimensional plasma crystal, observed experimentally
by Du et al. [Phys. Rev. E 89, 021101(R) (2014)], is explained in simulations
and theory. We use the simple model of a pointlike ion wake charge to reproduce
this intriguing effect in simulations, allowing for a detailed investigation
and a deeper understanding of the underlying dynamics. We show that the
nonreciprocity of the particle interaction, owing to the wake charges, is
responsible for a broken symmetry of the channel that enables a persistent
self-propelled motion of the extra particle. We find good agreement of the
terminal extra-particle velocity with our theoretical considerations and with
experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, PRL (https://journals.aps.org/prl/), updated
version with correct author affiliation
Network analysis of 3D complex plasma clusters in a rotating electric field
Network analysis was used to study the structure and time evolution of driven
three-dimensional complex plasma clusters. The clusters were created by
suspending micron-size particles in a glass box placed on top of the rf
electrode in a capacitively coupled discharge. The particles were highly
charged and manipulated by an external electric field that had a constant
magnitude and uniformly rotated in the horizontal plane. Depending on the
frequency of the applied electric field, the clusters rotated in the direction
of the electric field or remained stationary. The positions of all particles
were measured using stereoscopic digital in-line holography. The network
analysis revealed the interplay between two competing symmetries in the
cluster. The rotating cluster was shown to be more cylindrical than the
nonrotating cluster. The emergence of vertical strings of particles was also
confirmed.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures; corrected Fig.4 and typo
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