Optical measurement of the picosecond fluid mechanics in simple liquids generated by vibrating nanoparticles: a review
Author/Creator
Author/Creator ORCID
Date
Type of Work
Department
Program
Citation of Original Publication
Uthe, Brian, John E Sader and Matthew Pelton. "Optical measurement of the picosecond fluid mechanics in simple liquids generated by vibrating nanoparticles: A review." Reports on Progress in Physics 85, no. 10 (17 October 2022). https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6633/ac8e82.
Rights
This is the Accepted Manuscript version of an article accepted for publication in Reports on Progress in Physics. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of Record is available online at https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6633/ac8e82.
Access to this item will begin on 10/17/2023
Access to this item will begin on 10/17/2023
Subjects
Abstract
Standard continuum assumptions commonly used to describe the fluid mechanics of simple
liquids have the potential to break down when considering flows at the nanometer scale.
Two common assumptions for simple molecular liquids are that (1) they exhibit a
Newtonian response, where the viscosity uniquely specifies the linear relationship between
the stress and strain rate, and (2) the liquid moves in tandem with the solid at any solidliquid interface, known as the no-slip condition. However, even simple molecular liquids
can exhibit a non-Newtonian, viscoelastic response at the picosecond time scales that are
characteristic of the motion of many nanoscale objects; this viscoelasticity arises because
these time scales can be comparable to those of molecular relaxation in the liquid. In
addition, even liquids that wet solid surfaces can exhibit nanometer-scale slip at those
surfaces. It has recently become possible to interrogate the viscoelastic response of simple
liquids and associated nanoscale slip using optical measurements of the mechanical
vibrations of metal nanoparticles. Plasmon resonances in metal nanoparticles provide
strong optical signals that can be accessed by several spectroscopies, most notably ultrafast
transient-absorption spectroscopy. These spectroscopies have been used to measure the
frequency and damping rate of acoustic oscillations in the nanoparticles, providing
quantitative information about mechanical coupling and exchange of mechanical energy
between the solid particle and its surrounding liquid. This information, in turn, has been
used to elucidate the rheology of viscoelastic simple liquids at the nanoscale in terms of
their constitutive relations, taking into account separate viscoelastic responses for both
shear and compressible flows. The nanoparticle vibrations have also been used to provide
quantitative measurements of slip lengths on the single-nanometer scale. Viscoelasticity
has been shown to amplify nanoscale slip, illustrating the interplay between different
aspects of the unconventional fluid dynamics of simple liquids at nanometer length scales
and picosecond time scales.
