Wetting and particle adsorption in nanoflows
2004; American Institute of Physics; Volume: 17; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1063/1.1815341
ISSN1527-2435
AutoresGermán Drazer, Boris Khusid, Joel Koplik, Andreas Acrivos,
Tópico(s)Microfluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications
ResumoMolecular dynamics simulations are used to study the behavior of closely-fitting spherical and ellipsoidal particles moving through a fluid-filled cylinder at nanometer scales. The particle, the cylinder wall and the fluid solvent are all treated as atomic systems, and special attention is given to the effects of varying the wetting properties of the fluid. Although the modification of the solid-fluid interaction leads to significant changes in the microstructure of the fluid, its transport properties are found to be the same as in bulk. Independently of the shape and relative size of the particle, we find two distinct regimes as a function of the degree of wetting, with a sharp transition between them. In the case of a highly-wetting suspending fluid, the particle moves through the cylinder with an average axial velocity in agreement with that obtained from the solution of the continuum Stokes equations. In contrast, in the case of less-wetting fluids, only the early-time motion of the particle is consistent with continuum dynamics. At later times, the particle is eventually adsorbed onto the wall and subsequently executes an intermittent stick-slip motion.We show that van der Walls forces are the dominant contribution to the particle adsorption phenomenon and that depletion forces are weak enough to allow, in the highly-wetting situation, an initially adsorbed particle to spontaneously desorb.
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