Competition between collapse and breakup in nanometer-sized thin rings using molecular dynamics and continuum modeling

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Abstract

We consider nanometer-sized fluid annuli (rings) deposited on a solid substrate and ask whether these rings break up into droplets due to the instability of Rayleigh-Plateau-type modified by the presence of the substrate, or collapse to a central drop due to the presence of azimuthal curvature. The analysis is carried out by a combination of atomistic molecular dynamics simulations and a continuum model based on a long-wave limit of Navier-Stokes equations. We find consistent results between the two approaches, and demonstrate characteristic dimension regimes which dictate the assembly dynamics. © 2012 American Chemical Society.

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Nguyen, T. D., Fuentes-Cabrera, M., Fowlkes, J. D., Diez, J. A., González, A. G., Kondic, L., & Rack, P. D. (2012). Competition between collapse and breakup in nanometer-sized thin rings using molecular dynamics and continuum modeling. Langmuir, 28(39), 13960–13967. https://doi.org/10.1021/la303093f

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