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      Nanorheology of Interfacial Water during Ice Gliding

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          Nanofluidics, from bulk to interfaces.

          Nanofluidics has emerged recently in the footsteps of microfluidics, following the quest for scale reduction inherent to nanotechnologies. By definition, nanofluidics explores transport phenomena of fluids at nanometer scales. Why is the nanometer scale specific? What fluid properties are probed at nanometric scales? In other words, why does 'nanofluidics' deserve its own brand name? In this critical review, we will explore the vast manifold of length scales emerging for fluid behavior at the nanoscale, as well as the associated mechanisms and corresponding applications. We will in particular explore the interplay between bulk and interface phenomena. The limit of validity of the continuum approaches will be discussed, as well as the numerous surface induced effects occurring at these scales, from hydrodynamic slippage to the various electro-kinetic phenomena originating from the couplings between hydrodynamics and electrostatics. An enlightening analogy between ion transport in nanochannels and transport in doped semi-conductors will be discussed (156 references).
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            Unifying suspension and granular rheology.

            Using an original pressure-imposed shear cell, we study the rheology of dense suspensions. We show that they exhibit a viscoplastic behavior similarly to granular media successfully described by a frictional rheology and fully characterized by the evolution of the friction coefficient μ and the volume fraction ϕ with a dimensionless viscous number I(v). Dense suspension and granular media are thus unified under a common framework. These results are shown to be compatible with classical empirical models of suspension rheology and provide a clear determination of constitutive laws close to the jamming transition.
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              Sliding Friction

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                PRXHAE
                Physical Review X
                Phys. Rev. X
                American Physical Society (APS)
                2160-3308
                November 2019
                November 4 2019
                : 9
                : 4
                Article
                10.1103/PhysRevX.9.041025
                c2d859a2-b550-4f49-8ff5-18c01b1bff43
                © 2019

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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