Hyperuniformity in ternary fluid mixtures: the role of wetting and hydrodynamics
Nadia Bihari Padhan, Axel Voigt

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to explore how wetting and hydrodynamics influence hyperuniformity in ternary fluid mixtures, revealing that wetting asymmetry can control spatial order.
Contribution
It demonstrates how wetting properties and hydrodynamics affect hyperuniformity in ternary fluids, extending understanding from binary systems and highlighting wetting asymmetry as a control parameter.
Findings
Hydrodynamics weaken hyperuniformity in ternary mixtures.
Wetting properties influence the degree of hyperuniformity.
Partial wetting regimes show similar hyperuniformity across components.
Abstract
Phase separation in multicomponent fluids is central to understanding the organization of complex materials and biological structures. The Cahn-Hilliard-Navier-Stokes (CHNS) equations offer a robust framework for modeling such systems, capturing both diffusive dynamics and hydrodynamic interactions. In this work, we investigate hyperuniformity, characterized by suppressed large-scale density fluctuations, in ternary fluid mixtures governed by the ternary CHNS equations. Using large-scale direct numerical simulations, we systematically explore the influence of wetting conditions and hydrodynamic effects on emergent hyperuniformity. Similar to binary systems we observe that the presence of hydrodynamics weakens the hyperuniform characteristics. However, also the wetting properties have an effect. We find that in partial wetting regimes, all three components exhibit comparable degrees of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
