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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 95 (1991), S. 9424-9425 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: In a recent paper [R. R. Singh and K. S. Pitzer, J. Chem. Phys. 92, 3096 (1990)] it is shown that the slope of the coexistence curve diameter and the critical compressibility can be well described by linear functions of Pitzer's acentric factor. Singh and Pitzer conclude that variations in these quantities are therefore due to changes in the two-body intermolecular potential. We argue that they are primarily due to changes in the relative importance of three-body interactions, as shown by Pestak et al. [Phys. Rev. B 36, 599 (1987)].
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 91 (1989), S. 1843-1854 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The nature of long-range many-body interactions in metallic fluids is examined with emphasis on their possible role in the unique features of these systems observed near the liquid–vapor critical point. A reexamination of recent theoretical results demonstrating the existence of van der Waals forces between "pseudoatoms'' (ion cores and associated screening electrons) reveals a direct correspondence with dispersion forces in insulating systems. In the limit of high conduction electron number densities ρ, pseudoatoms have an effective frequency-dependent polarizability α(ω)=α(0)ω2p/(ω2p−ω2), where α(0)=z/4πρ, with z the ion valence, and ωp is the classical electron gas plasma frequency (4πρe2/m)1/2. It is the dynamic nature of the interactions (arising from fluctuations of the pseudoatoms) that permits such a long-range interaction to exist. The dimensionless parameter α(0)ρ which in insulating fluids characterizes the relative importance of triplet (Axilrod–Teller) to pair dispersion interactions is thus system independent and significantly larger than in nonmetallic fluids. The nature of this dynamic polarizability is further examined in the context of a transport theory for a classical plasma based on the Boltzmann equation. The statistical mechanics of fluctuating pseudoatoms at finite temperature is studied both for the metallic fluid and in the Wigner crystal. These various approaches suggest that the pseudoatom interaction may be viewed as a potential mediated by the exchange of plasmons, just as conventional van der Waals forces arise from the exchange of virtual excitations of atomic levels. A description of the critical point in terms of pseudoatom interactions appears to explain qualitatively the extreme liquid–vapor asymmetry of the coexistence curves of cesium and rubidium as arising from the magnitude of three-body interactions. Additionally, it suggests that the thermal energy at the critical point scales with the plasmon energy, consistent with experiment.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 90 (1989), S. 7448-7460 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A theoretical description of the critical point of a polymer solution is formulated directly from the Edwards continuum model of polymers with two- and three-body excluded-volume interactions. A Hubbard–Stratonovich transformation analogous to that used in recent work on the liquid–vapor critical point of simple fluids is used to recast the grand partition function of the polymer solution as a functional integral over continuous fields. The resulting Landau–Ginzburg–Wilson (LGW) Hamiltonian is of the form of a generalized nonsymmetric n=1 component vector model, with operators directly related to certain connected correlation functions of a reference system. The latter is taken to be an ensemble of Gaussian chains with three-body excluded-volume repulsions, and the operators are computed in three dimensions by means of a perturbation theory that is rapidly convergent for long chains. A mean field theory of the functional integral yields a description of the critical point in which the power-law variations of the critical polymer volume fraction φc, critical temperature Tc, and critical amplitudes on polymerization index N are essentially identical to those found in the Flory–Huggins theory. In particular, we find φc ∼N−1/2, Tθ−Tc∼N−1/2 with (Tθ the theta temperature), and that the composition difference between coexisting phases varies with reduced temperature t as N−1/4t1/2. The mean field theory of the interfacial tension σ between coexisting phases near the critical point, developed by considering the LGW Hamiltonian for a weakly inhomogeneous solution, yields σ∼N−1/4t3/2, with the correlation length diverging as ξ∼N1/4t−1/2 within the same approximation, consistent with the mean field limit of de Gennes' scaling form. Generalizations to polydisperse systems are discussed.
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [S.l.] : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    Physics of Fluids 10 (1998), S. 2701-2723 
    ISSN: 1089-7666
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: A mechanism by which smooth initial conditions evolve towards a topological reconfiguration of fluid interfaces is studied in the context of Darcy's law. In the case of thin fluid layers, nonlinear PDEs for the local thickness are derived from an asymptotic limit of the vortex sheet representation. A particular example considered is the Rayleigh–Taylor instability of stratified fluid layers, where the instability of the system is controlled by a Bond number B. It is proved that, for a range of B and initial data "subharmonic" to it, interface pinching must occur in at least infinite time. Numerical simulations suggest that "pinching" singularities occur generically when the system is unstable, and in particular immediately above a bifurcation point to instability. Near this bifurcation point an approximate analytical method describing the approach to a finite-time singularity is developed. The method exploits the separation of time scales that exists close to the first instability in a system of finite extent, with a discrete spectrum of modes. In this limit, slowly growing long-wavelength modes entrain faster short-wavelength modes, and thereby, allow the derivation of a nonlinear evolution equation for the amplitudes of the slow modes. The initial-value problem is solved in this slaved dynamics, yielding the time and analytical structure of a singularity that is associated with the motion of zeros in the complex plane, suggesting a general mechanism of singularity formation in this system. The discussion emphasizes the significance of several variational principles, and comparisons are made between the numerical simulations and the approximate theory. © 1998 American Institute of Physics.
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Accounts of chemical research 22 (1989), S. 77-82 
    ISSN: 1520-4898
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    The @journal of physical chemistry 〈Washington, DC〉 98 (1994), S. 9626-9636 
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Physics
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 88 (1988), S. 7059-7065 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The quantitative validity of asymptotic particle–hole symmetry in a fluid at its liquid–vapor critical point is determined by means of the exact mapping of the fluid Hamiltonian onto that of an effective Landau–Ginzburg–Wilson model studied first by Hubbard and Schofield. A particular three-particle correlation of a reference fluid is identified as that which controls the breaking of liquid–vapor symmetry, as manifested in a linear mixing of the pure Ising-like scaling fields and a singularity in the coexistence curve diameter. The inherent smallness of the mixing coefficient in a pair-potential fluid is shown to reflect the weak density dependence of the second moment of the two-particle direct correlation function of the reference system. It is further demonstrated that three-body interactions of the Axilrod–Teller-type enhance the broken particle–hole symmetry found in a purely pairwise-additive Hamiltonian, and detailed calculations give diameter anomaly amplitudes which vary linearly with the fluid polarizability, in quantitative agreement with recent experiments.
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 84 (1986), S. 3367-3378 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The formation of spherical micelles in aqueous solutions of nonionic surfactants and the equilibria between two such micellar phases are studied with a phenomenological model incorporating hydrophobic interactions and the configurational entropy of the amphiphiles. The distribution of micelle sizes is determined over the entire temperature-composition phase diagram, and moments of that distribution function determine the consolute point parameters. In a generalization of an analysis given by Stillinger and Ben-Naim, the mathematical properties of various thermodynamic functions in the neighborhood of the critical micelle concentration are related to the location of branch points of the osmotic pressure in the complex concentration plane. The model attributes the experimentally observed lower critical solution points in these systems to surfactant–water hydrogen bonding, whose temperature dependence is described with a mean field approximation. Calculated phase diagrams are in qualitative agreement with those from experiments, in particular, exhibiting closed solubility loops with quite distinct upper and lower critical compositions, and values for the lower critical composition on the order of several percent volume fraction. The relevance of certain aspects of the model to the understanding of microemulsions is discussed.
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 83 (1985), S. 1246-1254 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: A phenomenological approach to the theory of complex phase diagrams in binary liquid mixtures is developed. The random-mixing Flory–Huggins free energy expression is modified by the generalization of local pairwise energies to the corresponding free energies which, for systems with specific interactions such as hydrogen bonds, are described in terms of multiple-level partition functions. The temperature-dependent effective interactions in recent lattice models for these systems appear as special cases of this more general result. While characteristic asymmetries of various interactional correlation functions evaluated in the coexisting phases are found to parallel those of the interactions themselves, the symmetry of the phase diagram is not affected by such interactions, in contrast to the results of decorated-lattice calculations. A heuristic explanation of this is given, supporting a recent suggestion that the description of interaction-driven asymmetric coexistence curves requires an enlarged space of statistical variables which includes density fluctuations.
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [S.l.] : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    Physics of Fluids 8 (1996), S. 843-854 
    ISSN: 1089-7666
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Molecules at the air–water interface often form inhomogeneous layers in which domains of different densities are separated by sharp interfaces. Complex interfacial pattern formation may occur through the competition of short- and long-range forces acting within the monolayer. The overdamped hydrodynamics of such interfacial motion is treated here in a general manner that accounts for dissipation both within the monolayer and in the subfluid. Previous results on the linear stability of interfaces are recovered and extended, and a formulation applicable to the nonlinear regime is developed. A simplified dynamical law valid when dissipation in the monolayer itself is negligible is also proposed. Throughout the analysis, special attention is paid to the dependence of the dynamical behavior on a characteristic length scale set by the ratio of the viscosities in the monolayer and in the subphase. © 1996 American Institute of Physics.
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