Quantum plumbing: the mysteries of nanoscale flows

Thumbnail

Event details

Date 15.09.2023
Hour 13:3014:30
Speaker Nikita Kavokine studied physics and chemistry at Ecole Normale Supérieure (ENS) in Paris. His PhD work, in the group of Prof. Lydéric Bocquet, involved both theory and experiment in the field of nanoscale fluid dynamics. He then obtained a Flatiron Research Fellowship, and spent a year in New York working on advanced numerical methods for condensed matter systems. Since 2023, he leads the “Quantum Plumbers” group at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz, Germany. His research is at the interface between ‘hard’ and ’soft’ condensed matter, focussing on the quantum behavior of liquids near solid surfaces. 
Location
Category Conferences - Seminars
Event Language English

Liquids are usually described within classical physics, whereas solids require the tools of quantum mechanics. I will show how in nanoscale systems this distinction no longer holds. At these scales, liquid flows may in fact exhibit quantum effects as they interact with electrons in the solid walls. I will first discuss the quantum friction phenomenon, where charge fluctuations in the liquid interact with electronic excitations in the solid to produce a hydrodynamic friction force. Using many-body quantum theory, we predict that this effect is particularly important for water flowing on carbon-based materials, and we obtain experimental evidence of the underlying mechanism from pump-probe terahertz spectroscopy. I will then show how the theory can be pushed one step further to describe hydrodynamic Coulomb drag – the generation of electric current by a liquid in the solid along which it flows. This phenomenon involves a subtle interplay of electrostatic and electron-phonon interactions, and suggests strategies for designing materials with low hydrodynamic friction.


 

Practical information

  • General public
  • Free

Tags

quantum nanoscale

Event broadcasted in

Share