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We compute the Soret coefficient for a particle moving through a fluid subjected to a temperature gradient. The viscosity and thermal conductivity of the particle are in general different from those of the solvent and its surface tension may depend on temperature. We find that the Soret coefficient depends linearly on the derivative of the surface tension with respect to temperature and decreases in accordance with the ratios between viscosities and thermal conductivities of particle and solvent. Additionally, the Soret coefficient also depends on a parameter which gives the ratio between Marangoni and shear stresses, a dependence which results from the local stresses inducing a heat flux along the particle surface. Our results are compared to those obtained by using the Stokes value for the mobility in the calculation of the Soret coefficient and in the estimation of the radius of the particle. We show cases in which these differences may be important. The new expression of the Soret coefficient can systematically be used for a more accurate study of thermophoresis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1140/epje/i2019-11822-y | DOI Listing |
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2025
Institute for Photon Science and Technology, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan.
Vibrational microscopy provides label-free, bond-selective chemical contrast by detecting molecular vibrations, making it invaluable for biomedical research. While conventional methods rely on the direct detection of Raman scattering or infrared absorption, recently developed vibrational photothermal (ViP) microscopy achieves chemical contrast indirectly through refractive index (RI) changes. This indirect approach enables unique imaging capabilities beyond traditional chemical imaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
July 2025
Department of Mathematics, College of Science, King Khalid University, Abha, Saudi Arabia.
In this paper, a new numerical technique was developed to investigate magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) flow of Williamson nanofluid past a nonlinear stretching surface imbedded in a porous medium laden with Soret and Dufour effects. The control equations, which are highly nonlinear partial differential equations, are first converted into ordinary differential equation (ODEs) using similarity transformation and then are solved effectively by the hybrid computational method applying Morlet Wavelet Neural Networks (MWNNs) combined with a heuristic optimizers neural network and particle swarm as MWNNs-PSO-NNA. The proposed MWNNs-PSO-NNA shows a very low mean square error and Theil's Inequality Coefficient indicating that the accuracy of the model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
July 2025
Fluid Mechanics Group, Faculty of Engineering, Mondragon University, 20500 Mondragon, Spain.
We present an experimental investigation of mass transport phenomena in aqueous lithium bromide (LiBr-H2O) solutions, focusing on both molecular diffusion and thermodiffusion (Soret effect). Our results show a non-monotonic trend in the diffusion coefficient D with a pronounced maximum at w ≈ 0.3 kg/kg (LiBr), a feature that is consistently observed in multiple independent studies and likely reflects microstructural transitions within the solution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
June 2025
Department of Computer Engineering, Biruni University, 34010, Istanbul, Turkey.
Cubic stratification dramatically enhances thermal and mass transport in quadratic mixed convection, which is advantageous for electronics cooling, biomedical technology, and power plants. Nanofluids are essential to the development of next-generation cooling and environmental management solutions because of their exceptional thermal characteristics. Motivated by such impactful applications in thermal and engineering systems, this work uses the Buongiorno model to examine heat and mass transfer in Maxwell nanofluids over a vertically extended permeable surface under Darcy-Forchheimer porous flow situations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
June 2025
Institute of Biological Information Processing IBI-4, Forschungszentrum Jülich, 52428 Jülich, Germany.
The migration of particles induced by spatial gradients in temperature is commonly referred to as thermophoresis, thermodiffusion, thermal diffusion, or the (Ludwig-)Soret effect. The force on colloidal particles that drives such a migration depends on the response to variations in temperature, both of single particles and of interactions between particles. A distinction can thus be made between single-particle and collective contributions to the thermophoretic force experienced by a colloidal particle.
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