scholarly journals Oscillating friction of nanoscale capillary bridge

Friction ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuai Wu ◽  
Yuqing He ◽  
Quanshui Zheng ◽  
Ming Ma

AbstractThe presence of a capillary bridge between solid surfaces is ubiquitous under ambient conditions. Usually, it leads to a continuous decrease of friction as a function of bridge height. Here, using molecular dynamics we show that for a capillary bridge with a small radius confined between two hydrophilic elastic solid surfaces, the friction oscillates greatly when decreasing the bridge height. The underlying mechanism is revealed to be a periodic ordered-disordered transition at the liquid–solid interfaces. This transition is caused by the balance between the surface tension of the liquid–vapor interface and the elasticity of the surface. This balance introduces a critical size below which the friction oscillates. Based on the mechanism revealed, a parameter-free analytical model for the oscillating friction was derived and found to be in excellent agreement with the simulation results. Our results describe an interesting frictional phenomenon at the nanoscale, which is most prominent for layered materials.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Liu ◽  
Majid Allahyari ◽  
Jorge S. Salinas ◽  
Nadim Zgheib ◽  
S. Balachandar

AbstractHigh-fidelity simulations of coughs and sneezes that serve as virtual experiments are presented, and they offer an unprecedented opportunity to peer into the chaotic evolution of the resulting airborne droplet clouds. While larger droplets quickly fall-out of the cloud, smaller droplets evaporate rapidly. The non-volatiles remain airborne as droplet nuclei for a long time to be transported over long distances. The substantial variation observed between the different realizations has important social distancing implications, since probabilistic outlier-events do occur and may need to be taken into account when assessing the risk of contagion. Contrary to common expectations, we observe dry ambient conditions to increase by more than four times the number of airborne potentially virus-laden nuclei, as a result of reduced droplet fall-out through rapid evaporation. The simulation results are used to validate and calibrate a comprehensive multiphase theory, which is then used to predict the spread of airborne nuclei under a wide variety of ambient conditions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 427-429 ◽  
pp. 133-136
Author(s):  
Qiang Song ◽  
Pu Zeng

The driving theory and the dynamic characteristics of small radius steering, medium radius steering and big radius steering is analyzed, and the simulation model is established under Matlab/Simulink. Then the track bulldozers steering performance of the three sheerings is simulated. The results show that, at different steering modes, the running states of the two sides driving motors are not the same, and the track driving forces of the two sides vary widely. The track driving force is great in the small radius steering model, while small in the medium and big radius steering models. The simulation results lay the foundation for dual-motor drive track bulldozers steering performance matching.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sankar Chakma ◽  
Vijayanand S. Moholkar

This paper presents the effects of various parameters that significantly affect the cavitation. In this study, three types of liquid mediums with different physicochemical properties were considered as the cavitation medium. The effects of various operating parameters such as temperature, pressure, initial bubble radius, dissolved gas content and so forth, were investigated in detail. The simulation results of cavitation bubble dynamics model showed a very interesting link among these parameters for production of oxidizing species. The formation of •OH radical and H2O2 is considered as the results of main effects of sonochemical process. Simulation results of radial motion of cavitation bubble dynamics revealed that bubble with small initial radius gives higher sonochemical effects. This is due to the bubble with small radius can undergo many acoustic cycles before reaching its critical radius when it collapses and produces higher temperature and pressure inside the bubble. On the other hand, due to the low surface tension and high vapor pressure, organic solvents are not suitable for sonochemical reactions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elnaz Attar Jannesar ◽  
Hossein Hamzehpour

AbstractAcoustic tweezing of bioparticles has distinct advantages over other manipulation methods such as electrophoresis or magnetophoresis in biotechnological applications. This manipulation method guarantees the viability of the bio-particles during and after the process. In this paper, the effects of sinusoidal boundaries of a microchannel on acoustophoretic manipulation of microparticles are studied. Our results show that while top and bottom walls are vertically actuated at the horizontal half-wave resonance frequency, a large mono-vortex appears, which is never achievable in a rectangular geometry with flat walls and one-dimensional oscillations. The drag force caused by such a vortex in combination with the tilted acoustic radiation force leads to trapping and micromixing of microparticles with diameters larger and smaller than the critical size, respectively. Simulation results in this paper show that efficient particle trapping occurs at the intermediate sinusoidal boundary amplitudes. It is also indicated that in a square-sinusoidal geometry there are two strong vortices, instead of one vortex. Sub-micrometer particles tend to be trapped dramatically faster in such a geometry than in the rectangular-sinusoidal ones.


Nanophotonics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (14) ◽  
pp. 4253-4264
Author(s):  
Sarah A. Alodan ◽  
Justin M. Gorham ◽  
Frank W. DelRio ◽  
Fadhel Alsaffar ◽  
Ghadeer Aljalham ◽  
...  

AbstractNewly explored two-dimensional (2D) materials have shown promising optical properties, owning to the tunable band gap of the layered material with its thickness. A widely used method to achieve tunable light emission (or photoluminescence) is through thickness modulation, but this can only cover specific wavelengths. This approach limits the development of tunable optical devices with high spectral resolution over a wide range of wavelengths. Here, we report wideband tunable light emission of exfoliated black phosphorus nanosheets via a pulsed thermal annealing process in ambient conditions. Tunable anisotropic emission was observed between wavelengths of 590 and 720 nm with a spectral resolution of 5 nm. This emission can be maintained for at least 11 days when proper passivation coupled with adequate storage is applied. Using hyperspectral imaging X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (i-XPS), this tunable emission is found to be strongly dependent on the level of oxidation. We finally discuss the underlying mechanism responsible for the observed tunable emission and show that tunable emission is only observed in nanosheets with thicknesses of (70–125 nm) ± 10 nm with the maximum range achieved for nanosheets with thicknesses of 125 ± 10 nm. Our results shed some light on an emerging class of 2D oxides with potential in optoelectronic applications.


Author(s):  
Marcus Herrmann ◽  
Marco Arienti ◽  
Marios Soteriou

Atomizing liquids by injecting them into crossflows is a common approach in gas turbines and augmentors. Much of our current understanding of the processes resulting in atomization of the jets, the resulting jet penetration and spray drop size distribution have been obtained by performing laboratory experiments at ambient conditions. Yet, operating conditions under which jets in crossflows atomize can be far different from ambient. Hence, several dimensionless groups have been identified that are believed to determine jet penetration and resulting drop size distribution. These are usually the jet and crossflow Weber and Reynolds numbers and the momentum flux ratio. In this paper, we aim to answer the question of whether an additional dimensionless group, the liquid to gas density ratio must be matched. We perform detailed simulations of the primary atomization region using the refined level set grid (RLSG) method to track the motion of the liquid/gas phase interface. We employ a balanced force, interface projected curvature method to ensure high accuracy of the surface tension forces, use a multiscale approach to transfer broken off, small scale nearly spherical drops into a Lagrangian point particle description allowing for full two-way coupling and continued secondary atomization, and employ a dynamic Smagorinsky large eddy simulation (LES) approach in the single phase regions of the flow to describe turbulence. We present simulation results for a turbulent liquid jet (q=6.6, We=330, and Re=14,000) injected into a gaseous crossflow (Re=740,000) analyzed under ambient conditions (density ratio 816) experimentally by Brown and McDonnell [2006, “Near Field Behavior of a Liquid Jet in a Crossflow,” Proceedings of the ILASS Americas, 19th Annual Conference on Liquid Atomization and Spray Systems]. We compare simulation results obtained using a liquid to gas density ratio of 10 and 100. The results show that the increase in density ratio causes a noticeable increase in liquid core penetration with reduced bending and spreading in the transverse directions. The post-primary atomization spray penetrates further in both the jet and transverse direction. Results further show that the penetration correlations for the windward side trajectory commonly reported in the literature strongly depend on the value of threshold probability used to identify the leading edge. Correlations based on penetration of the jet’s liquid core center of mass, on the other hand, can provide a less ambiguous measure of jet penetration. Finally, the increase in density ratio results in a decrease in wavelength of the most dominant feature associated with a traveling wave along the jet as determined by proper orthogonal decomposition.


2009 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 1945-1961 ◽  
Author(s):  
HUA KUANG ◽  
SONG TAO ◽  
SHIQIANG DAI ◽  
XINGLI LI

Pedestrian behavioral modeling is an important topic to reproduce rich pedestrian dynamics phenomena. In this paper, a modified lattice gas model is proposed to simulate pedestrian counter flow under periodic boundary conditions by considering the variable transition probability, which can quantitatively describe complex human subconscious behaviors and distinguish the individual and common characteristics of pedestrians. Four types of walkers are involved in the model, and their dynamical characteristics are discussed in some complex situations. The simulation results show that the presented model can reproduce some essential features of pedestrian counter flows, such as the lane formation, segregation effect and phase separation. For the mixed pedestrian flows, the comparison between the subconscious behaviors of obeying the traffic rules and those of breaking the traffic rules indicates that the former could effectively reduce the occurrence of jam cluster. In addition, it is found that with increase of the strength of drift D1, the jam transition threshold decreases. Finally, the simulation results are compared with our previous study (see Ref. 32). It is shown that the mean velocity and the mean flow are always larger at the free moving phase, and the underlying mechanism is discussed in detail.


Author(s):  
Danling Zeng ◽  
Deming Wang ◽  
Juanfang Liu

Interfacial phenomenon appears frequently in practice. It plays important roles in various fields of science and technology. In order to make a clear understanding on the characteristics of an interface, a molecular dynamics simulation (MDS) was performed. The simulation results show that there exists a transition layer between the coexisting phases in which thermodynamics properties changes continuously. On the other hand, according to the fractal theory it is considered that the interface is not a smooth surface but a fractal one. The fractal dimension of it is calculated in the paper by the aid of the general approach provided in fractal theory. Furthermore, a relation between interface tension and fractal dimension of the interface was advanced. The surface tension thus obtained agrees well with the experiments.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao-Jing Ma ◽  
Mamtimin Geni

The phenomenon of droplet impacting on solid surfaces widely exists in both nature and engineering systems. However, one concern is that the microdeformation of solid surface is difficult to be observed and measured during the process of impacting. Since the microdeformation can directly affect the stability of the whole system, especially for the high-rate rotating components, it is necessary to study this phenomenon. Aiming at this problem, a new numerical simulation algorithm based on the Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) method is brought forward to solve fluid-solid coupling and complex free surface problems in the paper. In order to test and analyze the feasibility and effectiveness of the improved SPH method, the process of a droplet impacting on an elastic plate was simulated. The numerical results show that the improved SPH method is able to present more detailed information about the microdeformation of solid surface. The influence of the elastic modulus of solid on the impacting process was also discussed.


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