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University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Research Topics

Slippery questions about complex fluids flowing past solids

Viscous flow is familiar and useful, yet the underlying physics is surprisingly subtle and complex. Recent experiments and simulations show that the textbook assumption of "no slip at the boundary" can fail greatly when walls are sufficiently smooth. The reasons for this seem to involve materials chemistry interactions that can be controlled - especially wettability and the presence of trace impurities, even of dissolved gases. To discover what boundary condition is appropriate for solving continuum equations requires investigation of microscopic particulars. Here, we draw attention to unresolved topics of investigation and to the potential to capitalize on "slip at the wall" for purposes of materials engineering.


References

  1. S. Granick, H. Lee, and Y. Zhu, "Slippery Questions of Stick When Fluid Flows Past Surfaces,"Nature Materials 2, 221 (2003). [PDF].
  2. Y. Zhu and S. Granick, "Superlubricity: A Paradox about Confined Fluids Resolved," Phys. Rev. Lett., 93, 096101 (2004). [PDF]
  3. Y. Zhu and S. Granick, "Biolubrication: Hyaluronic acid and the influence on its interfacial viscosity of a model anti-inflammatory drug," Macromolecules 36, 973 (2003). [PDF]

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The Granick research group is an affiliated member of the Materials Research Laboratory,
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