Casimir amplitudes and capillary condensation of near-critical fluids between parallel plates: Renormalized local functional theory

We investigate the critical behavior of a near-critical fluid confined between two parallel plates in contact with a reservoir by calculating the order parameter profile and the Casimir amplitudes (for the force density and for the grand potential). Our results are applicable to one-component fluids...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of chemical physics 2012-03, Vol.136 (11), p.114704-114704-15
Hauptverfasser: Okamoto, Ryuichi, Onuki, Akira
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We investigate the critical behavior of a near-critical fluid confined between two parallel plates in contact with a reservoir by calculating the order parameter profile and the Casimir amplitudes (for the force density and for the grand potential). Our results are applicable to one-component fluids and binary mixtures. We assume that the walls absorb one of the fluid components selectively for binary mixtures. We propose a renormalized local functional theory accounting for the fluctuation effects. Analysis is performed in the plane of the temperature T and the order parameter in the reservoir ψ ∞ . Our theory is universal if the physical quantities are scaled appropriately. If the component favored by the walls is slightly poor in the reservoir, there appears a line of first-order phase transition of capillary condensation outside the bulk coexistence curve. The excess adsorption changes discontinuously between condensed and noncondensed states at the transition. With increasing T , the transition line ends at a capillary critical point \documentclass[12pt]{minimal}\begin{document}$T=T_c^{\rm ca}$\end{document} T = T c ca slightly lower than the bulk critical temperature T c for the upper critical solution temperature. The Casimir amplitudes are larger than their critical point values by 10-100 times at off-critical compositions near the capillary condensation line.
ISSN:0021-9606
1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/1.3693331