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In the literature, two quite different phase-field formulations for the problem of alloy solidification can be found. In the first, the material in the diffuse interfaces is assumed to be in an intermediate state between solid and liquid, with a unique local composition. In the second, the interface is seen as a mixture of two phases that each retain their macroscopic properties, and a separate concentration field for each phase is introduced. It is shown here that both types of models can be obtained by the standard variational procedure if a grand-potential functional is used as a starting point instead of a free energy functional. The dynamical variable is then the chemical potential instead of the composition. In this framework, a complete analogy with phase-field models for the solidification of a pure substance can be established. This analogy is then exploited to formulate quantitative phase-field models for alloys with arbitrary phase diagrams. The precision of the method is illustrated by numerical simulations with varying interface thickness.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.84.031601 | DOI Listing |
PRX Life
February 2025
Department of Physics & Astronomy, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, USA.
When cells in a primary tumor work together to invade into nearby tissue, this can lead to cell dissociations-cancer cells breaking off from the invading front-leading to metastasis. What controls the dissociation of cells and whether they break off singly or in small groups? Can this be determined by cell-cell adhesion or chemotactic cues given to cells? We develop a physical model for this question, based on experiments that mimic aspects of cancer cell invasion using microfluidic devices with microchannels of different widths. Experimentally, most dissociation events ("ruptures") involve single cells breaking off, but we observe some ruptures of large groups (~20 cells) in wider channels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPRX Life
December 2024
William H. Miller III Department of Physics & Astronomy and Thomas C. Jenkins Department of Biophysics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
The motility of eukaryotic cells is strongly influenced by their environment, with confined cells often developing qualitatively different motility patterns from those migrating on simple two-dimensional substrates. Recent experiments, coupled with data-driven methods to extract a cell's equation of motion, showed that cancerous MDA-MB-231 cells persistently hop in a limit cycle when placed on two-state adhesive micropatterns (two large squares connected by a narrow bridge), while they remain stationary on average in rectangular confinements. In contrast, healthy MCF10A cells migrating on the two-state micropattern are bistable, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNPJ Microgravity
September 2025
Department of Mathematical Sciences & Center for Applied Mathematics and Statistics, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ, USA.
Colloid-polymer mixtures are an archetype for modeling phase transition processes, as they exhibit a low-density gas phase, high-density crystalline phase and an intervening liquid phase. While their equilibrium behavior has been studied extensively, the role of hydrodynamics in driving their phase separation is not yet understood. We present a theoretical model that describes hydrodynamic interactions in colloid-polymer mixtures in a microgravity environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Biomater
August 2025
School of Aerospace, Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering (AMME), Engineering Faculty, The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia. Electronic address:
Load-bearing ceramic structures have gained significant attention in biomedical applications attributable to their favourable mechanical and biological properties. However, their inherent brittleness and material defects compromise reliability and lead to premature, and catastrophic failure in vivo. To address these limitations, computational modelling has emerged as a powerful tool for predicting and analysing the fracture behaviour of various ceramic biostructures, elucidating failure mechanisms, and guiding the design of more robust ceramic implantable systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
August 2025
School of Civil Engineering, Architecture and the Environment, Hubei University of Technology, Wuhan 430068, China.
Non-uniform corrosion cracking in reinforced concrete buildings constitutes a fundamental difficulty resulting in durability failure. This work develops a microscopic-scale multi-species electrochemical phase field model to tackle this issue. The model comprehensively examines the spatiotemporal coupling mechanisms of the full "corrosion-rust swelling-cracking" process by integrating electrochemical reaction kinetics, multi-ion transport processes, and a unified phase field fracture theory.
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