1,771 research outputs found
Structure and Diffusion of Nanoparticle Monolayers Floating at Liquid/Vapor Interfaces: A Molecular Dynamics Study
Large-scale molecular dynamics simulations are used to simulate a layer of
nanoparticles diffusing on the surface of a liquid. Both a low viscosity
liquid, represented by Lennard-Jones monomers, and a high viscosity liquid,
represented by linear homopolymers, are studied. The organization and diffusion
of the nanoparticles are analyzed as the nanoparticle density and the contact
angle between the nanoparticles and liquid are varied. When the interaction
between the nanoparticles and liquid is reduced the contact angle increases and
the nanoparticles ride higher on the liquid surface, which enables them to
diffuse faster. In this case the short range order is also reduced as seen in
the pair correlation function. For the polymeric liquids, the out-of-layer
fluctuation is suppressed and the short range order is slightly enhanced.
However, the diffusion becomes much slower and the mean square displacement
even shows sub-linear time dependence at large times. The relation between
diffusion coefficient and viscosity is found to deviate from that in bulk
diffusion. Results are compared to simulations of the identical nanoparticles
in 2-dimensions.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Urban management, local government reform and the democratisation process in Mozambique: a Maputo city case study (1975-1990)
Paper presented at the Wits History Workshop: Democracy, Popular Precedents, Practice and Culture, 13-15 July, 1994
Capillary Waves at Liquid/Vapor Interfaces: A Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Evidence for capillary waves at a liquid/vapor interface are presented from
extensive molecular dynamics simulations of a system containing up to 1.24
million Lennard-Jones particles. Careful measurements show that the total
interfacial width depends logarithmically on , the length of the
simulation cell parallel to the interface, as predicted theoretically. The
strength of the divergence of the interfacial width on depends
inversely on the surface tension . This allows us to measure
two ways since can also be obtained from the difference in the
pressure parallel and perpendicular to the interface. These two independent
measures of agree provided that the interfacial order parameter
profile is fit to an error function and not a hyperbolic tangent, as often
assumed. We explore why these two common fitting functions give different
results for
Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Evaporation-Induced Nanoparticle Assembly
While evaporating solvent is a widely used technique to assemble nano-sized
objects into desired superstructures, there has been limited work on how the
assembled structures are affected by the physical aspects of the process. We
present large scale molecular dynamics simulations of the evaporation-induced
assembly of nanoparticles suspended in a liquid that evaporates in a controlled
fashion. The quality of the nanoparticle crystal formed just below the
liquid/vapor interface is found to be better at relatively slower evaporation
rates, as less defects and grain boundaries appear. This trend is understood as
the result of the competition between the accumulation and diffusion times of
nanoparticles at the liquid/vapor interface. When the former is smaller,
nanoparticles are deposited so fast at the interface that they do not have
sufficient time to arrange through diffusion, which leads to the prevalence of
defects and grain boundaries. Our results have important implications in
understanding assembly of nanoparticles and colloids in non-equilibrium liquid
environments.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Journal of Chemical Physic
Capillary waves at the liquid-vapor interface and the surface tension of water models
Capillary waves occurring at the liquid-vapor interface of water are studied
using molecular dynamics simulations. In addition, the surface tension,
determined thermodynamically from the difference in the normal and tangential
pressure at the liquid-vapor interface, is compared for a number of standard
three- and four-point water models. We study four three-point models (SPC/E,
TIP3P, TIP3P-CHARMM, and TIP3P-Ew) and two four-point models (TIP4P and
TIP4P-Ew). All of the models examined underestimate the surface tension; the
TIP4P-Ew model comes closest to reproducing the experimental data. The surface
tension can also be determined from the amplitude of capillary waves at the
liquid-vapor interface by varying the surface area of the interface. The
surface tensions determined from the amplitude of the logarithmic divergence of
the capillary interfacial width and from the traditional thermodynamic method
agree only if the density profile is fitted to an error function instead of a
hyperbolic tangent function.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in J. Chem.
Phys. [v2: Added references, corrected minor errors
Stress Relaxation of Entangled Polymer Networks
The non-linear stress-strain relation for crosslinked polymer networks is
studied using molecular dynamics simulations. Previously we demonstrated the
importance of trapped entanglements in determining the elastic and relaxational
properties of networks. Here we present new results for the stress versus
strain for both dry and swollen networks. Models which limit the fluctuations
of the network strands like the tube model are shown to describe the stress for
both elongation and compression. For swollen networks, the total modulus is
found to decrease like (V_0/V)^{2/3} and goes to the phantom model result only
for short strand networks.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, RevTe
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