Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
February 2014
The flow of fluids and particulate suspensions in realistic models of geological fractures is investigated by lattice Boltzmann numerical simulations. The walls are synthetic self-affine fractal surfaces combined to produce a tight fracture, the fluid is a viscous Newtonian liquid, and the particles are rigid noncolloidal solid spheres. One focus is channeling phenomena, where we compare the fracture aperture, the preferred paths for fluid flow, and the preferred paths for suspended particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular dynamics simulations are used to study dynamical coupling between conformational fluctuations of a highly charged flexible macromolecule and its surrounding ionic cloud. We find that the basic model of a polyelectrolyte as a chain of charged monomers captures the main experimental findings on the field-induced alignment of polyelectrolytes despite its simplicity. Contrary to current theories, the correlated local charge and field fluctuations in the vicinity of the macromolecule are found to dominate alignment along an external field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular dynamics simulations are used to study the spatiotemporal dynamics of charge fluctuations around a polyelectrolyte molecule at charge densities above and below the classic counterion condensation threshold. Surprisingly, the counterions form weakly interacting clusters which exhibit slowly decaying short range orientational order. Local charge fluctuations create energy fluctuations at the order of k_(B)T that is sufficient to affect the polyelectrolyte interaction with an approaching ligand molecule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
October 2005
We present a lattice formulation of a dynamic self-consistent field (DSCF) theory that is capable of resolving interfacial structure, dynamics, and rheology in inhomogeneous, compressible melts and blends of unentangled homopolymer chains. The joint probability distribution of all the Kuhn segments in the fluid, interacting with adjacent segments and walls, is approximated by a product of one-body probabilities for free segments interacting solely with an external potential field that is determined self-consistently. The effect of flow on ideal chain conformations is modeled with finitely extensible, nonlinearly elastic dumbbells in the Peterlin approximation, and related to stepping probabilities in a random walk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have developed a dynamic self-consistent field theory, without any adjustable parameters, for unentangled polymer blends under shear. Our model accounts for the interaction between polymers, and enables one to compute the evolution of the local rheology, microstructure, and the conformations of the polymer chains under shear self-consistently. We use this model to study the interfacial dynamics in sheared polymer blends and make a quantitative comparison between this model and molecular dynamics simulations.
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