The nonlocal model of short-range wetting

Recently, a Nonlocal Model was proposed that seems to overcome difficulties of the fluctuation theory of 3D wetting. In this thesis we explore this model in detail, laying the foundations for its use. We show how the model can be derived from a microscopic Hamiltonian by a careful coarse graining pr...

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Main Author: Bernardino, Nelson Fernando Rei
Other Authors: Parry, Andrew ; Jensen, Henrik
Published: Imperial College London 2008
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.484765
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4847652017-08-30T03:17:23ZThe nonlocal model of short-range wettingBernardino, Nelson Fernando ReiParry, Andrew ; Jensen, Henrik2008Recently, a Nonlocal Model was proposed that seems to overcome difficulties of the fluctuation theory of 3D wetting. In this thesis we explore this model in detail, laying the foundations for its use. We show how the model can be derived from a microscopic Hamiltonian by a careful coarse graining procedure, based on a previous recipe proposed by Fisher and Jin. These authors obtained a model with a position dependent stiffness that has a dramatic effect on the wetting transition, driving the transition first-order. Our improved method does not have an explicit position dependent stiffness, rather the substrate-interface interaction is described by a binding potential functional with an elegant diagrammatic expansion. We then check the robustness of the structure of the Nonlocal Model using perturbation theory to study a more general microscopic Hamiltonian. The model is robust to such generalisations, whose only relevant effect is the change of the values of the coefficients of the Nonlocal Model. The same remarks are valid for the inclusion of a surface field. The generalised model still has the same structure, albeit with different coefficients. Another important extension is a longer-range substrate-fluid interaction. We generalise the model to be able to deal with these and also with a bulk field. The results for the particular case of an exponentially decaying substrate potential reveal interesting consequences for the transition, which can provide a direct test of the Nonlocal Model. We finalise with a chapter proving that the Nonlocal model obeys a sum-rule for complete wetting.541.33Imperial College Londonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.484765http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/1349Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 541.33
spellingShingle 541.33
Bernardino, Nelson Fernando Rei
The nonlocal model of short-range wetting
description Recently, a Nonlocal Model was proposed that seems to overcome difficulties of the fluctuation theory of 3D wetting. In this thesis we explore this model in detail, laying the foundations for its use. We show how the model can be derived from a microscopic Hamiltonian by a careful coarse graining procedure, based on a previous recipe proposed by Fisher and Jin. These authors obtained a model with a position dependent stiffness that has a dramatic effect on the wetting transition, driving the transition first-order. Our improved method does not have an explicit position dependent stiffness, rather the substrate-interface interaction is described by a binding potential functional with an elegant diagrammatic expansion. We then check the robustness of the structure of the Nonlocal Model using perturbation theory to study a more general microscopic Hamiltonian. The model is robust to such generalisations, whose only relevant effect is the change of the values of the coefficients of the Nonlocal Model. The same remarks are valid for the inclusion of a surface field. The generalised model still has the same structure, albeit with different coefficients. Another important extension is a longer-range substrate-fluid interaction. We generalise the model to be able to deal with these and also with a bulk field. The results for the particular case of an exponentially decaying substrate potential reveal interesting consequences for the transition, which can provide a direct test of the Nonlocal Model. We finalise with a chapter proving that the Nonlocal model obeys a sum-rule for complete wetting.
author2 Parry, Andrew ; Jensen, Henrik
author_facet Parry, Andrew ; Jensen, Henrik
Bernardino, Nelson Fernando Rei
author Bernardino, Nelson Fernando Rei
author_sort Bernardino, Nelson Fernando Rei
title The nonlocal model of short-range wetting
title_short The nonlocal model of short-range wetting
title_full The nonlocal model of short-range wetting
title_fullStr The nonlocal model of short-range wetting
title_full_unstemmed The nonlocal model of short-range wetting
title_sort nonlocal model of short-range wetting
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2008
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.484765
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