scholarly journals The influence of bond rigidity and cluster diffusion on the self-diffusion of hard spheres with square well interaction

2008 ◽  
Vol 128 (20) ◽  
pp. 204504 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sujin Babu ◽  
Jean-Christophe Gimel ◽  
Taco Nicolai ◽  
Cristiano De Michele
1996 ◽  
Vol 312 ◽  
pp. 223-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey F. Morris ◽  
John F. Brady

Self-diffusion in a suspension of spherical particles in steady linear shear flow is investigated by following the time evolution of the correlation of number density fluctuations. Expressions are presented for the evaluation of the self-diffusivity in a suspension which is either raacroscopically quiescent or in linear flow at arbitrary Peclet number $Pe = \dot{\gamma}a^2/2D$, where $\dot{\gamma}$ is the shear rate, a is the particle radius, and D = kBT/6πa is the diffusion coefficient of an isolated particle. Here, kB is Boltzmann's constant, T is the absolute temperature, and η is the viscosity of the suspending fluid. The short-time self-diffusion tensor is given by kBT times the microstructural average of the hydrodynamic mobility of a particle, and depends on the volume fraction $\phi = \frac{4}{3}\pi a^3n$ and Pe only when hydrodynamic interactions are considered. As a tagged particle moves through the suspension, it perturbs the average microstructure, and the long-time self-diffusion tensor, D∞s, is given by the sum of D0s and the correlation of the flux of a tagged particle with this perturbation. In a flowing suspension both D0s and D∞ are anisotropic, in general, with the anisotropy of D0s due solely to that of the steady microstructure. The influence of flow upon D∞s is more involved, having three parts: the first is due to the non-equilibrium microstructure, the second is due to the perturbation to the microstructure caused by the motion of a tagged particle, and the third is by providing a mechanism for diffusion that is absent in a quiescent suspension through correlation of hydrodynamic velocity fluctuations.The self-diffusivity in a simply sheared suspension of identical hard spheres is determined to O(øPe3/2) for Pe ≤ 1 and ø ≤ 1, both with and without hydro-dynamic interactions between the particles. The leading dependence upon flow of D0s is 0.22DøPeÊ, where Ê is the rate-of-strain tensor made dimensionless with $\dot{\gamma}$. Regardless of whether or not the particles interact hydrodynamically, flow influences D∞s at O(øPe) and O(øPe3/2). In the absence of hydrodynamics, the leading correction is proportional to øPeDÊ. The correction of O(øPe3/2), which results from a singular advection-diffusion problem, is proportional, in the absence of hydrodynamic interactions, to øPe3/2DI; when hydrodynamics are included, the correction is given by two terms, one proportional to Ê, and the second a non-isotropic tensor.At high ø a scaling theory based on the approach of Brady (1994) is used to approximate D∞s. For weak flows the long-time self-diffusivity factors into the product of the long-time self-diffusivity in the absence of flow and a non-dimensional function of $\bar{P}e = \dot{\gamma}a^2/2D^s_0(\phi)$. At small $\bar{P}e$ the dependence on $\bar{P}e$ is the same as at low ø.


Soft Matter ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riccardo Artoni ◽  
Michele Larcher ◽  
James T. Jenkins ◽  
Patrick Richard

The self-diffusivity tensor in homogeneously sheared dense granular flows is anisotropic. We show how its components depend on solid fraction, restitution coefficient, shear rate, and granular temperature.


Author(s):  
Victor P. Arkhipov ◽  
Natalia A. Kuzina ◽  
Andrei Filippov

AbstractAggregation numbers were calculated based on measurements of the self-diffusion coefficients, the effective hydrodynamic radii of micelles and aggregates of oxyethylated alkylphenols in aqueous solutions. On the assumption that the radii of spherical micelles are equal to the lengths of fully extended neonol molecules, the limiting values of aggregation numbers corresponding to spherically shaped neonol micelles were calculated. The concentration and temperature ranges under which spherical micelles of neonols are formed were determined.


1989 ◽  
Vol 39 (8) ◽  
pp. 5025-5034 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Vogl ◽  
W. Petry ◽  
Th. Flottmann ◽  
A. Heiming

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