Novel Fluctuations at a Constrained Liquid-Solid Interface
Abhishek Chaudhuri, Debasish Chaudhuri, Surajit Sengupta

TL;DR
This paper investigates the behavior of a liquid-solid interface under external constraints, revealing a layering transition that affects transport properties and induces unique interfacial fluctuations.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of a layering transition at constrained liquid-solid interfaces and explores its effects on transport phenomena and interfacial dynamics.
Findings
Layering transition occurs beyond a critical stress.
Interfacial fluctuations can cause crystal layer spallation.
Heat transport shows signatures of structural transformations.
Abstract
We study the interface between a solid trapped within a bath of liquid by a suitably shaped non-uniform external potential. Such a potential may be constructed using lasers, external electric or magnetic fields or a surface template. We study a two dimensional case where a thin strip of solid, created in this way, is surrounded on either side by a bath of liquid with which it can easily exchange particles. Since height fluctuations of the interface cost energy, this interface is constrained to remain flat at all length scales. However, when such a solid is stressed by altering the depth of the potential; beyond a certain limit, it responds by relieving stress by novel interfacial fluctuations which involve addition or deletion of entire lattice layers of the crystal. This ``layering'' transition is a generic feature of the system regardless of the details of the interaction potential.…
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