Most macroscopic machines rely on wheels and gears. Yet, rigid gears are entirely impractical on the nano-scale. Here we propose a more useful method to couple any rotary engine to any other mechanical elements on the nano- and micro-scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing positional data from video microscopy of a two-dimensional colloidal system and from simulations of hard disks, we determine the wave-vector-dependent elastic dispersion relations in glass. The emergence of rigidity based on the existence of a well defined displacement field in amorphous solids is demonstrated. Continuum elastic theory is recovered in the limit of long wavelengths which provides the glass elastic shear and bulk modulus as a function of temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe analyze the glassy dynamics of binary mixtures of hard disks in two dimensions. Predictions of the mode-coupling theory (MCT) are tested with extensive Brownian dynamics simulations. Measuring the collective particle density correlation functions in the vicinity of the glass transition, we verify four predicted mixing effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
June 2010
A relation between equilibrium, steady state, and waiting-time-dependent dynamical two-time correlation functions in dense glass-forming liquids subject to homogeneous steady shear flow is discussed. The systems under study show pronounced shear thinning, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci
December 2009
Brownian dynamics simulations of bidisperse hard discs moving in two dimensions in a given steady and homogeneous shear flow are presented close to and above the glass transition density. The stationary structure functions and stresses of shear-melted glass are compared quantitatively to parameter-free numerical calculations of monodisperse hard discs using mode coupling theory within the integration through transients framework. Theory qualitatively explains the properties of the yielding glass but quantitatively overestimates the shear-driven stresses and structural anisotropies.
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