Mecke K (2005)
Publication Status: Published
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2005
Publisher: AMER INST PHYSICS
Book Volume: 123
Journal Issue: 20
DOI: 10.1063/1.2121507
Thermal fluctuations cause the local normal vectors of fluid interfaces to deviate from the vertical direction defined by the flat mean interface position. This leads to a nonzero mean value of the corresponding polar tilt angle which renders a characterization of the thermal state of an interface. Based on the concept of an effective interface Hamiltonian we determine the variances of the local interface position and of its lateral derivatives. This leads to the probability distribution functions for the metric of the interface and for the tilt angle which allows us to calculate its mean value and its mean-square deviation. We compare the temperature dependences of these quantities as predicted by the simple capillary-wave model, by an improved phenomenological model, and by the microscopic effective interface Hamiltonian derived from density-functional theory. The mean tilt angle discriminates clearly between these theoretical approaches and emphasizes the importance of the variation of the surface tension at small wavelengths. Also the tilt angle two-point correlation function is determined which renders an additional structural characterization of interfacial fluctuations. Various experimental accesses to measure the local orientational fluctuations are discussed.
APA:
Mecke, K. (2005). Local orientations of fluctuating fluid interfaces. Journal of Chemical Physics, 123(20). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2121507
MLA:
Mecke, Klaus. "Local orientations of fluctuating fluid interfaces." Journal of Chemical Physics 123.20 (2005).
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