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Revision 3242 by gezelter, Tue Oct 2 22:01:48 2007 UTC vs.
Revision 3247 by gezelter, Thu Oct 4 21:11:58 2007 UTC

# Line 146 | Line 146 | cooling rate described by the heat-transfer equations
146   simulation can then be tuned by changing the effective solvent
147   viscosity ($\eta$) until the nanoparticle cooling rate matches the
148   cooling rate described by the heat-transfer equations
149 < (\ref{eq:heateqn}). The effective solvent viscosity (in poise) for a G
150 < of $87.5\times 10^{6}$ $(\mathrm{Wm^{-2}K^{-1}})$ is 0.17, 0.20, and
151 < 0.22 for 20 {\AA}, 30 {\AA}, and 40 {\AA} particles, respectively. The
152 < effective solvent viscosity (again in poise) for an interfacial
153 < conductance of $117\times 10^{6}$ $(\mathrm{Wm^{-2}K^{-1}})$ is 0.23,
154 < 0.29, and 0.30 for 20 {\AA}, 30 {\AA} and 40 {\AA} particles.  Cooling
155 < traces for each particle size are presented in
149 > (\ref{eq:heateqn}). The effective solvent viscosity (in Pa s) for a G
150 > of $87.5\times 10^{6}$ $(\mathrm{Wm^{-2}K^{-1}})$ is $4.2 \times
151 > 10^{-6}$, $5.0 \times 10^{-6}$, and
152 > $5.5 \times 10^{-6}$ for 20 {\AA}, 30 {\AA}, and 40 {\AA} particles, respectively. The
153 > effective solvent viscosity (again in Pa s) for an interfacial
154 > conductance of $117\times 10^{6}$ $(\mathrm{Wm^{-2}K^{-1}})$ is $5.7
155 > \times 10^{-6}$, $7.2 \times 10^{-6}$, and $7.5 \times 10^{-6}$
156 > for 20 {\AA}, 30 {\AA} and 40 {\AA} particles.  Cooling traces for
157 > each particle size are presented in
158   Fig. \ref{fig:images_cooling_plot}. It should be noted that the
159   Langevin thermostat produces cooling curves that are consistent with
160   Newtonian (single-exponential) cooling, which cannot match the cooling
# Line 172 | Line 174 | solvent viscosities of 0.23-0.30 poise (depending on t
174   \caption{Thermal cooling curves obtained from the inverse Laplace
175   transform heat model in Eq. \ref{eq:laplacetransform} (solid line) as
176   well as from molecular dynamics simulations (circles).  Effective
177 < solvent viscosities of 0.23-0.30 poise (depending on the radius of the
178 < particle) give the best fit to the experimental cooling curves.
179 < %Since
180 < %this viscosity is substantially in excess of the viscosity of liquid
181 < %water, much of the thermal transfer to the surroundings is probably
180 < %due to the capping agent.
181 < }
177 > solvent viscosities of 4.2-7.5 $\times 10^{-6}$ Pa s (depending on the
178 > radius of the particle) give the best fit to the experimental cooling
179 > curves.  This viscosity suggests that the nanoparticles in these
180 > experiments are surrounded by a vapor layer (which is a reasonable
181 > assumptions given the initial temperatures of the particles).  }
182   \label{fig:images_cooling_plot}
183   \end{figure}
184  

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