9,199 research outputs found
Slow dynamics of phospholipid monolayers at the air/water interface
Phospholipid monolayers at the air-water interface serve as model systems for
various biological interfaces, e.g. lung surfactant layers and outer leaflets
of cell membranes. Although the dynamical (viscoelastic) properties of these
interfaces may play a key role in stability, dynamics and function, the
relatively weak rheological properties of most such monolayers have rendered
their study difficult or impossible. A novel technique to measure the dynamical
properties of fluid-fluid interfaces have developed accordingly. We
microfabricate micron-scale ferromagnetic disks, place them on fluid-fluid
interfaces, and use external electromagnets to exert torques upon them. By
measuring the rotation that results from a known external torque, we compute
the rotational drag, from which we deduce the rheological properties of the
interface. Notably, our apparatus enable direct interfacial visualization while
the probes are torqued.
In this fluid dynamics video, we directly visualize
dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine(DPPC) monolayers at the air-water interface
while shearing. At about 9 mN/m, DPPC exhibits a liquid condensed(LC) phase
where liquid crystalline domains are compressed each other, and separated by
grain boundaries. Under weak oscillatory torque, the grain boundaries slip past
each other while larger shear strain forms a yield surface by deforming and
fracturing the domains. Shear banding, which is a clear evidence of yield
stress, is visualized during steady rotation. Remarkably slow relaxation time
was also found due to slow unwinding of the stretched domains.Comment: 1 page, no figures, gallery of fluid motion 200
Microfluidics: Fluid physics at the nanoliter scale
Microfabricated integrated circuits revolutionized computation by vastly reducing the space, labor, and time required for calculations. Microfluidic systems hold similar promise for the large-scale automation of chemistry and biology, suggesting the possibility of numerous experiments performed rapidly and in parallel, while consuming little reagent. While it is too early to tell whether such a vision will be realized, significant progress has been achieved, and various applications of significant scientific and practical interest have been developed. Here a review of the physics of small volumes (nanoliters) of fluids is presented, as parametrized by a series of dimensionless numbers expressing the relative importance of various physical phenomena. Specifically, this review explores the Reynolds number Re, addressing inertial effects; the Péclet number Pe, which concerns convective and diffusive transport; the capillary number Ca expressing the importance of interfacial tension; the Deborah, Weissenberg, and elasticity numbers De, Wi, and El, describing elastic effects due to deformable microstructural elements like polymers; the Grashof and Rayleigh numbers Gr and Ra, describing density-driven flows; and the Knudsen number, describing the importance of noncontinuum molecular effects. Furthermore, the long-range nature of viscous flows and the small device dimensions inherent in microfluidics mean that the influence of boundaries is typically significant. A variety of strategies have been developed to manipulate fluids by exploiting boundary effects; among these are electrokinetic effects, acoustic streaming, and fluid-structure interactions. The goal is to describe the physics behind the rich variety of fluid phenomena occurring on the nanoliter scale using simple scaling arguments, with the hopes of developing an intuitive sense for this occasionally counterintuitive world
Effective pseudo-potentials of hydrodynamic origin
It is shown that low Reynolds number fluid flows can cause suspended
particles to respond as though they were in an equilibrium system with an
effective potential. This general result follows naturally from the fact that
different methods of moving particles in viscous fluids give rise to very
different long-range flows. Two examples are discussed: electrophoretic
`levitation' of a heavy charged sphere, for which a hydrodynamic
`pseudo-potential' can be written in closed form, and quasi-two dimensional
crystals of like-charged colloidal spheres which form near charged walls, whose
apparent attraction arises not from a force but from persistent fluid flows.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, submitted to J. Fluid Mec
Kinematic irreversibility in surfactant-laden interfaces
The surface shear viscosity of an insoluble surfactant monolayer often
depends strongly on its surface pressure. Here, we show that a particle moving
within a bounded monolayer breaks the kinematic reversibility of
low-Reynolds-number flows. The Lorentz reciprocal theorem allows such
irreversibilities to be computed without solving the full nonlinear equations,
giving the leading-order contribution of surface-pressure-dependent surface
viscosity. In particular, we show that a disk translating or rotating near an
interfacial boundary experiences a force in the direction perpendicular to that
boundary. In unbounded monolayers, coupled modes of motion can also lead to
non-intuitive trajectories, which we illustrate using an interfacial analog of
the Magnus effect. This perturbative approach can be extended to more complex
geometries, and to 2D suspensions more generally
Schematic Models for Active Nonlinear Microrheology
We analyze the nonlinear active microrheology of dense colloidal suspensions
using a schematic model of mode-coupling theory. The model describes the
strongly nonlinear behavior of the microscopic friction coefficient as a
function of applied external force in terms of a delocalization transition. To
probe this regime, we have performed Brownian dynamics simulations of a system
of quasi-hard spheres. We also analyze experimental data on hard-sphere-like
colloidal suspensions [Habdas et al., Europhys. Lett., 2004, 67, 477]. The
behavior at very large forces is addressed specifically
Induced-charge Electrokinetic Phenomena: Theory and Microfluidic Applications
We give a general, physical description of ``induced-charge electro-osmosis''
(ICEO), the nonlinear electrokinetic slip at a polarizable surface, in the
context of some new techniques for microfluidic pumping and mixing. ICEO
generalizes ``AC electro-osmosis'' at micro-electrode arrays to various
dielectric and conducting structures in weak DC or AC electric fields. The
basic effect produces micro-vortices to enhance mixing in microfluidic devices,
while various broken symmetries -- controlled potential, irregular shape,
non-uniform surface properties, and field gradients -- can be exploited to
produce streaming flows. Although we emphasize the qualitative picture of ICEO,
we also briefly describe the mathematical theory (for thin double layers and
weak fields) and apply it to a metal cylinder with a dielectric coating in a
suddenly applied DC field.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figs; revsion with more refs, one new fig, and more
emphasis on microfluidic
Induced-Charge Electro-Osmosis
We describe the general phenomenon of `induced-charge electro-osmosis' (ICEO)
-- the nonlinear electro-osmotic slip that occurs when an applied field acts on
the ionic charge it {\sl induces} around a polarizable surface. Motivated by a
simple physical picture, we calculate ICEO flows around conducting cylinders in
steady (DC), oscillatory (AC), and suddenly-applied electric fields. This
picture, and these systems, represent perhaps the clearest example of nonlinear
electrokinetic phenomena. We complement and verify this physically-motivated
approach using a matched asymptotic expansion to the electrokinetic equations
in the thin double-layer and low potential limits. ICEO slip velocities vary
like , where is the field strength and is a
geometric length scale, and are set up on a time scale , where is the screening length and is the ionic diffusion
constant. We propose and analyze ICEO microfluidic pumps and mixers that
operate without moving parts under low applied potentials. Similar flows around
metallic colloids with fixed total charge have been described in the Russian
literature (largely unnoticed in the West). ICEO flows around conductors with
fixed potential, on the other hand, have no colloidal analog and offer further
possibilities for microfluidic applications.Comment: 36 pages, 8 figures, to appear in J. Fluid Mec
Improvement of Renormalization-Scale Uncertainties Within Empirical Determinations of the b-Quark Mass
Accurate determinations of the MS-bar b-quark mass from
experimental data currently contain three
comparable sources of uncertainty; the experimental uncertainty from moments of
this cross-section, the uncertainty associated with , and the
theoretical uncertainty associated with the renormalization scale. Through
resummation of all logarithmic terms explicitly determined in the perturbative
series by the renormalization-group (RG) equation, it is shown that the
renormalization-scale dependence is virtually eliminated as a source of
theoretical uncertainty in . This resummation also reduces the
estimated effect of higher-loop perturbative contributions, further reducing
the theoretical uncertainties in . Furthermore, such resummation
techniques improve the agreement between the values of the MS-bar b-quark mass
extracted from the various moments of [], obviating the need to
choose an optimummoment for determining . Resummation techniques are
also shown to reduce renormalization-scale dependence in the relation between
b-quark MS-bar and pole mass and in the relation between the pole and
mass.Comment: 19 pages, latex2e, 6 eps figures contained in latex file. Errors
corrected in equations (20)--(22
Investigating heuristic evaluation as a methodology for evaluating pedagogical software: An analysis employing three case studies
This paper looks specifically at how to develop light weight methods of evaluating pedagogically motivated software. Whilst we value traditional usability testing methods this paper will look at how Heuristic Evaluation can be used as both a driving force of Software Engineering Iterative Refinement and end of project Evaluation. We present three case studies in the area of Pedagogical Software and show how we have used this technique in a variety of ways. The paper presents results and reflections on what we have learned. We conclude with a discussion on how this technique might inform on the latest developments on delivery of distance learning. © 2014 Springer International Publishing
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