Abstract

The widespread developments in the use of nanomaterials in catalysis, adsorption, and nanofluidics present significant new challenges in achieving optimal adsorbed fluid flow characteristics. Here we demonstrate, using molecular dynamics simulations of nanoconfined fluids, that at nanoscales, fluid-solid friction is not restricted to a sharp interface as is commonly assumed; instead it is distributed over the whole adsorbed fluid phase, and is strongest in an interfacial region that is not negligible in comparison to the system size. Our simulations yield position-dependent dynamical fluid-solid friction coefficients, and lead to a modification of conventional hydrodynamics, incorporating distributed momentum loss in the fluid due to fluid-solid interaction. The results demonstrate that the usual concepts of slip length or interfacial friction coefficient are meaningful only for uniform fluids, and lose their significance for adsorbates in nanospaces, which are intrinsically inhomogeneous. We show that static friction coefficients, based on equilibrium density distributions, follow the same spatial dependence as the dynamical coefficients. These results open up possibilities for tailoring nanomaterials and surfaces to engineer low friction pathways for adsorbed fluid flow by tuning the potential energy landscape.

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