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Non-Equilibrium Computer Experiments of Soft Matter Systems. Arash Nikoubashman Institute of Theoretical Physics Vienna University of Technology arash.nikoubashman@tuwien.ac.at. Table of Contents. Introduction Simulation Technique Flow Properties of Cluster Crystals
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Non-Equilibrium Computer Experiments of Soft Matter Systems ArashNikoubashman Institute of Theoretical Physics Vienna University of Technology arash.nikoubashman@tuwien.ac.at
Table of Contents • Introduction • Simulation Technique • Flow Properties of Cluster Crystals • Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow • Conclusions & Outlook • Appendix
Introduction What is Soft matter? • Mesoscopic particles (1nm – 1mm) dispersed in an atomic solvent
Introduction What is Soft matter? • Mesoscopic particles (1nm – 1mm) dispersed in an atomic solvent • Everyday soft materials: • Blood
Introduction What is Soft matter? • Mesoscopic particles (1nm – 1mm) dispersed in an atomic solvent • Everyday soft materials: • Blood • Paint
Introduction What is Soft matter? • Mesoscopic particles (1nm – 1mm) dispersed in an atomic solvent • Everyday soft materials: • Blood • Paint • Milk
Introduction What is Soft matter? • Mesoscopic particles (1nm – 1mm) dispersed in an atomic solvent • Everyday soft materials: • Blood • Paint • Milk • Ice Cream
Introduction …and why are these substances soft? • Elastic constant G for a simple cubic crystal1: G = 1/veF’’(r=a) Gcolloidal/Gatomic = 10-12 – 10-9 [1] C. N. Likos, Phys. Rep. 348, 267 (2001)
Introduction Why is soft matter out of equilibrium interesting?
Introduction It is omnipresent in our daily lives!
Introduction It is omnipresent in our daily lives! • Cellular transport2 [2] Medaliaet al., Science 298, 1209 (2002)
Introduction It is omnipresent in our daily lives! • Cellular transport • DNA sequencing3 [3] M. Zwolak and M. Di Ventra, Rev. Mod. Phys. 80, 141 (2008)
Introduction It is omnipresent in our daily lives! • Cellular transport • DNA sequencing • Blood flow4 [4] Pan et al., Microvasc. Res. 82, 163 (2011)
Introduction It is omnipresent in our daily lives! • Cellular transport • DNA sequencing • Blood flow • Microfluidics5 [5] T. M. Squires and S. R. Quake, Rev. Mod. Phys. 77, 977 (2005)
Introduction It is omnipresent in our daily lives! • Cellular transport • DNA sequencing • Blood flow • Microfluidics • Paint
Introduction It is omnipresent in our daily lives! • Cellular transport • DNA sequencing • Blood flow • Microfluidics • Paint • Oil recovery
Introduction Interesting flow properties! • Shear thickening6 [6] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KL8--cmew3k
Introduction Interesting flow properties! • Shear thickening • Shear thinning7 [7] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pes1Ju1Cl8o
Introduction Interesting flow properties! • Shear thickening • Shear thinning • Ferrofluidics8 … and much more [8] http://www.kodama.hc.uec.ac.jp/spiral/
Table of Contents • Introduction • Simulation Technique • Flow Properties of Cluster Crystals • Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow • Conclusions & Outlook • Appendix
Simulation Technique Computational task • Simulation of complex fluids in and out of equilibrium • Take hydrodynamic interactions (HI) of solvent into account9 [9] http://iffwww.kfa-juelich.de/www/Applets/iMPC/
Simulation Technique “Naïve” approach: pure MD simulations • Pro: • Straight-forward implementation • Atomistic simulations • Contra: • Large disparity in length- and timescales between solute and solvent particles Computationally expensive, O(N2)
Simulation Technique “Our” approach: Multi-Particle Collision Dynamics10 • Pro: • Hydrodynamics fully resolved • Thermal fluctuations preserved • Many different flow fields possible • Can be easily integrated into existing MD codes • Very fast and scalable algorithm, O(N) • Contra: • Coarse grained fluid [10] A. Malevanets & R. Kapral, J. Chem. Phys. 110, 8605 (1999)
Simulation Technique • Flow profile not superimposed, but self-emerging (through the appropriate boundary conditions) • Thus, we can induce: • Wall-Slip • Nonlinear velocity profiles • … Poiseuille flow Shear flow
Table of Contents • Introduction • Simulation Technique • Flow Properties of Cluster Crystals • Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow • Conclusions & Outlook • Appendix
Flow Properties of Cluster Crystals • We study particles interacting via GEM potential: • Potential is: • Purely repulsive • Bounded Partial and full particle overlap is possible
Flow Properties of Cluster Crystals GEM crystals have peculiar equilibrium properties • Clustering • Density independent lattice constant • Activated hopping
Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • What happens out of equilibrium? • Let’s shear the system11! ? soft hard [11] A. Nikoubashman, G. Kahl and C. N. Likos, Phys Rev. Lett. 107, 068302 (2011)
Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Shear destroys crystalline order • System melts and array of strings emerges! soft hard
Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • What if we shear even stronger? ? soft hard
Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Particles can escape from their string • System destabilizes and melts completely soft hard
Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Potential exerted by a string of GEM particles
Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Free volume decreases rapidly • Fluid resistance grows, viscosity increases Free volume of the system as a function of shear-rate
Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Free volume decreases rapidly • Fluid resistance grows, viscosity increases Shear-stress as a function of shear-rate
Table of Contents • Introduction • Simulation Technique • Flow Properties of Cluster Crystals • Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow • Conclusions & Outlook • Appendix
Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow Expose cluster crystal to Poiseuille flow12 • Velocity profile of pure solvent: • Local shear rate: How does the crystal react? [12] A. Nikoubashman, G. Kahl and C. N. Likos, Soft Matter, DOI:10.10139/c1sm06899g (2012)
Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow Scenario I Scenario II String phase is global, no microphase separation! • String-formation close to the walls • Crystalline layer(s) at the center of the channel Thick crystalline slab flows Crystalline layers act on strings as external potential Presence of crystal flattens velocity profile Strings break up into clumps
Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow Flow strongly affected by GEM crystal Velocity profile of the liquid in the presence of the GEM crystal Particle flux of solute particles. Arrows indicate when the first layer melts
Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow Flow quantization Plateau height of the plug flow pattern Width of the flat part of the velocity profile
Table of Contents • Introduction • Simulation Technique • Flow Properties of Cluster Crystals • Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow • Conclusions & Outlook • Appendix
Conclusions & Outlook Conclusions • Soft matter in and out of equilibrium is ubiquitous in our daily lives • MPCD technique is a suitable means for studying it Outlook • Monomer resolved simulations of cluster crystals • Polymeric networks under flow
The End Thank you for your attention!
Table of Contents • Introduction • Simulation Technique • Flow Properties of Cluster Crystals • Cluster Crystals under Shear Flow • Cluster Crystals under Poiseuille Flow • Conclusions & Outlook • Appendix
Appendix Flow dynamics: two step process • Streaming step:
Appendix Flow dynamics: two step process • Streaming step: • Collision step:
Appendix • String-formation independent of initial configuration • Can we exploit this to accelerate crystallization?
Appendix Yes, shear facilitates the crystallization process10! Color coded density profiles. Top half: unsheared system, lower half: presheared system [10] A. Nikoubashman, G. Kahl and C. N. Likos, Soft Matter, DOI:10.10139/c1sm06899g (2012)