ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

82 - Andrey Pototsky , Uwe Thiele , 2014
We consider a carpet of self-propelled particles at the liquid-gas interface of a liquid film on a solid substrate. The particles excert an excess pressure on the interface and also move along the interface while the swimming direction performs rotat ional diffusion. We study the intricate influence of these self-propelled insoluble surfactants on the stability of the film surface and show that depending on the strength of in-surface rotational diffusion and the absolute value of the in-surface swimming velocity several characteristic instability modes can occur. In particular, rotational diffusion can either stabilize the film or induce instabilities of different character.
There are two modes by which clusters of aggregating particles can coalesce: The clusters can merge either (i) by the Ostwald ripening process in which particles diffuse from one cluster to the other whilst the cluster centres remain stationary, or ( ii) by means of a cluster translation mode, in which the clusters move towards each other and join. To understand in detail the interplay between these different modes, we study a model system of hard particles with an additional attraction between them. The particles diffuse along narrow channels with smooth or periodically corrugated walls, so that the system may be treated as one-dimensional. When the attraction between the particles is strong enough, they aggregate to form clusters. The channel potential influences whether clusters can move easily or not through the system and can prevent cluster motion. We use Dynamical Density Functional theory to study the dynamics of the aggregation process, focusing in particular on the coalescence of two equal size clusters. As long as the particle hard-core diameter is non-zero, we find that the coalescence process can be halted by a sufficiently strong corrugation potential. The period of the potential determines the size of the final stable clusters. For the case of smooth channel walls, we demonstrate that there is a cross-over in the dominance of the two different coarsening modes, that depends on the strength of the attraction between particles, the cluster sizes and the separation distance between clusters.
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا