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Turbulence and Coarsening in Active and Passive Binary Mixtures

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Abstract Book of the XXIII IUPAP International Conference on Statistical Physics, Genova, Italy, (9-13 July 2007)

Abstract

When a binary fluid mixture at the critical concentration is cooled from a high temperature to a sufficiently low temperature (below a critical one), the original homogeneous phase becomes unstable and spontaneously evolves into two phases separated by an interface. As time advances an out-of-equilibrium process of phase ordering takes place through the formation of domains of a single phase that grow algebraically in time. In fluids, the presence of a hydrodynamic velocity field makes this process more complicated than the corresponding one in solid alloys.\\ Phase ordering dynamics becomes even more complex and less understood when the fluid mixture is externally driven; beyond their theoretical interest, phase separating binary fluids under flow embody a great technological interest for their distinctive rheological properties. This problem has been extensively investigated in shear flows where coarsening becomes highly anisotropic. Less clear is the case in which the mixture is stirred by a turbulent flow. Here, phase separation may be completely suppressed, or a dynamical steady state with domains of finite length and well defined phases may develop. In this work we investigate phase separation between two fluids in two-dimensions by means of Direct Numerical Simulations of coupled Navier-Stokes and Cahn-Hilliard equations. We study the phase ordering process in the presence of an external stirring acting on the velocity field.\\ For both active and passive mixtures we find that, for a sufficiently strong stirring, coarsening is arrested in a stationary dynamical state characterized by a continuous rupture and formation of finite domains. Coarsening arrest is shown to be independent of the chaotic or regular nature of the flow; indeed, this phenomenon is a consequence of the competition between thermodynamic forces and stretching induced by local shears.\\ Moreover we find numerical evidence that the dependence of the arrest scale on the shear rate follows a power law behavior with an exponent close to the one measured in experiments and numerical simulations in pure shear flows. Our results might suggest the existence of a mechanism independent of the nature of the flow in the coarsening arrest. Further numerical and experimental investigations, with the aim of clarifying the dependence of the arrest scale on the flow properties, would be extremely interesting.

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