Surface tension: Difference between revisions
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#[http://dx.doi.org/ G. J. Gloor, G. Jackson, F. J. Blas, and E. de Miguel "Test-area simulation method for the direct determination of the interfacial tension of systems with continuous or discontinuous potentials", Journal of Chemical Physics '''123''' 134703 (2005)] | #[http://dx.doi.org/ G. J. Gloor, G. Jackson, F. J. Blas, and E. de Miguel "Test-area simulation method for the direct determination of the interfacial tension of systems with continuous or discontinuous potentials", Journal of Chemical Physics '''123''' 134703 (2005)] | ||
#[http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.25.1699 K. Binder "Monte Carlo calculation of the surface tension for two- and three-dimensional lattice-gas models", Physical Review A '''25''' pp. 1699 - 1709 (1982)] | #[http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.25.1699 K. Binder "Monte Carlo calculation of the surface tension for two- and three-dimensional lattice-gas models", Physical Review A '''25''' pp. 1699 - 1709 (1982)] | ||
[[category]] | [[category: statistical mechanics]] |
Revision as of 11:22, 1 August 2007
The surface tension, , is a measure of the work required to create a surface.
Thermodynamics
In the Canonical ensemble the surface tension is formally given as:
- ;
where
- is the number of particles
- is the volume
- is the temperature
- is the surface area
- is the Helmholtz energy function
Computer Simulation
A review on different techniques to compute surface (interface) tension can be found in the paper by Gloor et al.
Liquid-Vapour Interfaces of one component systems
Binder procedure
For given conditions of volume and temperature, the Helmholtz energy function is computed as a function of the number of molecules:
The calculation is usually carried out using Monte Carlo simulation
If liquid-vapour equilibrium occurs, the plot of the chemical potential, , as a function of shows a loop.
Using basic thermodynamic procedures (Maxwell construction) it is possible to compute the densities of the two phases;
Explicit interfaces
Mixtures
References
- G. J. Gloor, G. Jackson, F. J. Blas, and E. de Miguel "Test-area simulation method for the direct determination of the interfacial tension of systems with continuous or discontinuous potentials", Journal of Chemical Physics 123 134703 (2005)
- K. Binder "Monte Carlo calculation of the surface tension for two- and three-dimensional lattice-gas models", Physical Review A 25 pp. 1699 - 1709 (1982)