Structure, thermodynamics, and position-dependent diffusivity in fluids with sinusoidal density variations

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Abstract

Molecular dynamics simulations and a stochastic method based on the Fokker-Planck equation are used to explore the consequences of inhomogeneous density profiles on the thermodynamic and dynamic properties of the hard-sphere fluid and supercooled liquid water. Effects of the inhomogeneity length scale are systematically considered via the imposition of sinusoidal density profiles of various wavelengths. For long-wavelength density profiles, bulk-like relationships between local structure, thermodynamics, and diffusivity are observed as expected. However, for both systems, a crossover in behavior occurs as a function of wavelength, with qualitatively different correlations between the local static and dynamic quantities emerging as density variations approach the scale of a particle diameter. Irrespective of the density variation wavelength, average diffusivities of hard-sphere fluids in the inhomogeneous and homogeneous directions are coupled and approximately correlate with the volume available for insertion of another particle. Unfortunately, a quantitatively reliable static predictor of position-dependent dynamics has yet to be identified for even the simplest of inhomogeneous fluids. © 2014 American Chemical Society.

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Bollinger, J. A., Jain, A., & Truskett, T. M. (2014). Structure, thermodynamics, and position-dependent diffusivity in fluids with sinusoidal density variations. Langmuir, 30(28), 8247–8252. https://doi.org/10.1021/la5017005

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