arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1401.5244 [cond-mat.stat-mech]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Scaling laws and bulk-boundary decoupling in heat flow

J. J. del Pozo, P. L. Garrido, P. I. Hurtado

Published 2014-01-21, updated 2015-03-25Version 2

When driven out of equilibrium by a temperature gradient, fluids respond by developing a nontrivial, inhomogeneous structure according to the governing macroscopic laws. Here we show that such structure obeys strikingly simple scaling laws arbitrarily far from equilibrium, provided that both macroscopic local equilibrium and Fourier's law hold. Extensive simulations of hard disk fluids confirm the scaling laws even under strong temperature gradients, implying that Fourier's law remains valid in this highly nonlinear regime, with putative corrections absorbed into a nonlinear conductivity functional. In addition, our results show that the scaling laws are robust in the presence of strong finite-size effects, hinting at a subtle bulk-boundary decoupling mechanism which enforces the macroscopic laws on the bulk of the finite-sized fluid. This allows to measure for the first time the marginal anomaly of the heat conductivity predicted for hard disks.

Comments: 5 pages + 5 figures + 3 pages of supplementary material
Journal: Phys. Rev. E 91, 032116 (2015)
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:0710.3500 [cond-mat.stat-mech] (Published 2007-10-18)
Heat Flow in Classical and Quantum Systems and Thermal Rectification
arXiv:1004.0445 [cond-mat.stat-mech] (Published 2010-04-03, updated 2010-06-18)
Self-organization in He4 near the superfluid transition in heat flow and gravity
arXiv:cond-mat/0009317 (Published 2000-09-20)
On heat flow and non-reciprocity