scholarly journals On longitudinal and transversal diffusion of carbon nanotubes

2021 ◽  
Vol 2131 (2) ◽  
pp. 022069
Author(s):  
V Rudyak ◽  
A Belkin

Abstract In this work, the anisotropy of diffusion of carbon nanotubes in water was studied by the molecular dynamics method. Two models of nanotubes were used, their lengths varied from 4 to 31 nanometers. The first model is a nanotube with armchair chirality, the second is connected solid nanoscale rods. The behavior of various components of the velocity autocorrelation function of the nanotubes center of mass has been studied. It was established that the transverse component of this function has a negative region and a minimum point, in contrast to the average autocorrelation function, which decays monotonically. It is shown that the diffusion coefficients in the longitudinal and transverse directions can differ several times; the method proposed in this work was used to determine them. The effect of anisotropy increases with an increase in the ratio of the characteristic sizes of the nanotube. Using the Stokes - Einstein formula, the effective hydrodynamic radii of nanotubes have been determined. In all cases, the effective radius is significantly less than the tube length.

1989 ◽  
Vol 177 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Pine ◽  
D. A. Weitz ◽  
D. J. Durian ◽  
P. N. Pusey ◽  
R. J. A. Tough

ABSTRACTOn a short time scale, Brownian particles undergo a transition from initially ballistic trajectories to diffusive motion. Hydrodynamic interactions with the surrounding fluid lead to a complex time dependence of this transition. We directly probe this transition for colloidal particles by measuring the autocorrelation function of multiply scattered light and observe the effects of the slow power-law decay of the velocity autocorrelation function.


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