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Lev Truskinovsky

Bio: Lev Truskinovsky is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phase transition & Nucleation. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 133 publications receiving 4225 citations. Previous affiliations of Lev Truskinovsky include Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University & École Polytechnique.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a physically motivated regularization of the Euler equations is proposed to allow topological transitions to occur smoothly, where the sharp interface is replaced by a narrow transition layer across which the fluids may mix.
Abstract: One of the fundamental problems in simulating the motion of sharp interfaces between immiscible fluids is a description of the transition that occurs when the interfaces merge and reconnect. It is well known that classical methods involving sharp interfaces fail to describe this type of phenomena. Following some previous work in this area, we suggest a physically motivated regularization of the Euler equations which allows topological transitions to occur smoothly. In this model, the sharp interface is replaced by a narrow transition layer across which the fluids may mix. The model describes a flow of a binary mixture, and the internal structure of the interface is determined by both diffusion and motion. An advantage of our regularization is that it automatically yields a continuous description of surface tension, which can play an important role in topological transitions. An additional scalar field is introduced to describe the concentration of one of the fluid components and the resulting system of equations couples the Euler (or Navier–Stokes) and the Cahn–Hilliard equations. The model takes into account weak non–locality (dispersion) associated with an internal length scale and localized dissipation due to mixing. The non–locality introduces a dimensional surface energy; dissipation is added to handle the loss of regularity of solutions to the sharp interface equations and to provide a mechanism for topological changes. In particular, we study a non–trivial limit when both components are incompressible, the pressure is kinematic but the velocity field is non–solenoidal (quasi–incompressibility). To demonstrate the effects of quasi–incompressibility, we analyse the linear stage of spinodal decomposition in one dimension. We show that when the densities of the fluids are not perfectly matched, the evolution of the concentration field causes fluid motion even if the fluids are inviscid. In the limit of infinitely thin and well–separated interfacial layers, an appropriately scaled quasi–incompressible Euler–Cahn–Hilliard system converges to the classical sharp interface model. In order to investigate the behaviour of the model outside the range of parameters where the sharp interface approximation is sufficient, we consider a simple example of a change of topology and show that the model permits the transition to occur without an associated singularity.

878 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider a single spring with two convex wells separated by a spinodal region where the energy is concave, and show that the type of a bifurcation may depend crucially on the details of the concave (spinodal) part of the energy function.
Abstract: It has become common to model materials supporting several crystallographic phases as elastic continua with non (quasi) convex energy. This peculiar property of the energy originates from the multi-stability of the system at the microlevel associated with the possibility of several energetically equivalent arrangements of atoms in crystal lattices. In this paper we study the simplest prototypical discrete system—a one-dimensional chain with a finite number of bi-stable elastic elements. Our main assumption is that the energy of a single spring has two convex wells separated by a spinodal region where the energy is concave. We neglect the interaction beyond nearest neighbors and explore in some detail a complicated energy landscape for this mechanical system. In particular we show that under generic loading the chain possesses a large number of metastable configurations which may contain up to one (snap) spring in the unstable (spinodal) state. As the loading parameters vary, the system undergoes a number of bifurcations and we show that the type of a bifurcation may depend crucially on the details of the concave (spinodal) part of the energy function. In special cases we obtain explicit formulas for the local and global minima and provide a quantitative description of the possible quasi-static evolution paths and of the associated hysteresis.

195 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1993
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the classical system of jump conditions is at least incomplete in the case of phase transitions and that an additional condition must be added to the Rankine-Hugoniot (RH) jump conditions in order to provide sufficient data for the unique determination of the transformation process.
Abstract: Localized phase transitions as well as shock waves can often be modeled by material discontinuities satisfying Rankine-Hugoniot (RH) jump conditions. The use of Maxwell, Gibbs-Thompson, Hertz-Knudsen, and similar (supplementary to RH) relations in the theory of dynamic phase changes suggest that the classical system of jump conditions is at least incomplete in the case of phase transitions. While the propagation of a shock wave is completely determined by the conservations laws, the boundary conditions of the problem and the condition that the entropy increases in the process, the same is not true for the propagation of phase boundaries. Additional condition must be added to the RH conditions in order to provide sufficient data for the unique determination of the transformation process. The necessity was tacitly assumed by those who attacked the calculation of the phase boundary velocity without even trying to determine this parameter from the conservation laws and boundary conditions alone.

164 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the singular dissipative potential of the phenomenological rate-independent plasticity can be obtained by homogenization of a micro-model with quadratic dissipation.
Abstract: We show that the singular dissipative potential of the phenomenological rate-independent plasticity can be obtained by homogenization of a micro-model with quadratic dissipation. The essential ingredient making this reduction possible is a rugged energy landscape at the micro-scale, generating under external loading a regular cascade of subcritical bifurcations. Such landscape may appear as a result of a sufficiently strong pinning or jamming of defects, leading to elastic micro-metastability. The rate-independent plastic deformation emerges in this description as a continuous succession of infinitesimal viscous events; the limiting procedure presumes the elimination of small time and length scales. We present an explicit example of a simple viscoelastic mass-spring system whose macroscopic dissipative behavior is plastic, rate independent.

135 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that sufficiently strong nonlocality of the lattice model may be responsible for the multivaluedness of the kinetic relation and can quantitatively affect kinetics in the near-sonic region.
Abstract: Martensitic phase transitions are often modeled by mixed-type hyperbolic-elliptic systems. Such systems lead to ill-posed initial-value problems unless they are supplemented by an additional kinetic relation. In this paper we explicitly compute an appropriate closing relation by replacing the continuum model with its natural discrete prototype. The procedure can be viewed as either regularization by discretization or a physically motivated account of underlying discrete microstructure. We model phase boundaries by traveling wave solutions of a fully inertial discrete model for a bi-stable lattice with harmonic long-range interactions. Although the microscopic model is Hamiltonian, it generates macroscopic dissipation which can be specified in the form of a relation between the velocity of the discontinuity and the conjugate configurational force. This kinetic relation respects entropy inequality but is not a consequence of the usual Rankine--Hugoniot jump conditions. According to the constructed solution, the dissipation at the macrolevel is due to the induced radiation of lattice waves carrying energy away from the propagating front. We show that sufficiently strong nonlocality of the lattice model may be responsible for the multivaluedness of the kinetic relation and can quantitatively affect kinetics in the near-sonic region. Direct numerical simulations of the transient dynamics suggest stability of at least some of the computed traveling waves.

129 citations


Cited by
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28 Jul 2005
TL;DR: PfPMP1)与感染红细胞、树突状组胞以及胎盘的单个或多个受体作用,在黏附及免疫逃避中起关键的作�ly.
Abstract: 抗原变异可使得多种致病微生物易于逃避宿主免疫应答。表达在感染红细胞表面的恶性疟原虫红细胞表面蛋白1(PfPMP1)与感染红细胞、内皮细胞、树突状细胞以及胎盘的单个或多个受体作用,在黏附及免疫逃避中起关键的作用。每个单倍体基因组var基因家族编码约60种成员,通过启动转录不同的var基因变异体为抗原变异提供了分子基础。

18,940 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Van Kampen as mentioned in this paper provides an extensive graduate-level introduction which is clear, cautious, interesting and readable, and could be expected to become an essential part of the library of every physical scientist concerned with problems involving fluctuations and stochastic processes.
Abstract: N G van Kampen 1981 Amsterdam: North-Holland xiv + 419 pp price Dfl 180 This is a book which, at a lower price, could be expected to become an essential part of the library of every physical scientist concerned with problems involving fluctuations and stochastic processes, as well as those who just enjoy a beautifully written book. It provides an extensive graduate-level introduction which is clear, cautious, interesting and readable.

3,647 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Issues including sharp-interface analyses that relate these models to the classical free-boundary problem, computational approaches to describe interfacial phenomena, and models of fully miscible fluids are addressed.
Abstract: We review the development of diffuse-interface models of hydrodynamics and their application to a wide variety of interfacial phenomena. These models have been applied successfully to situations in which the physical phenomena of interest have a length scale commensurate with the thickness of the interfacial region (e.g. near-critical interfacial phenomena or small-scale flows such as those occurring near contact lines) and fluid flows involving large interface deformations and/or topological changes (e.g. breakup and coalescence events associated with fluid jets, droplets, and large-deformation waves). We discuss the issues involved in formulating diffuse-interface models for single-component and binary fluids. Recent applications and computations using these models are discussed in each case. Further, we address issues including sharp-interface analyses that relate these models to the classical free-boundary problem, computational approaches to describe interfacial phenomena, and models of fully miscible fluids.

1,948 citations