Dynamics at the Mesoscale:
Theory, Modelling and Experiments
September 8-11, 2004
Scientific Background
Currently, processes taking place at the nano and meso-scales have
attracted the interest of a large part of the scientific community because they are responsible for
the macroscopic properties of materials. Detailed study of the mechanisms acting in these scales
is essential for the design of new materials with prescribed physical, mechanical, thermal,
transport and interfacial properties. Besides, the
study of nanostructured systems addresses many important
questions which require the development of specific analysis tools. Statistical
physics and thermodynamics, nonlinear physics and stochastic processes, mesoscopic simulations and molecular
dynamics are concerned since it is essential to adopt a multi-scale point of view.
At the mesoscopic level, only one hundred or one thousand of elementary constituents may adopt collective
behavior and organize themselves into complex spatio-temporal structures. For such small systems, it is expected
that the emergence of macroscopic properties are affected by intrinsic fluctuations and microscopic
aspects such as local interactions. Sophisticated experimental techniques are becoming increasingly powerful and
allow to perform real-time in-situ observations at the meso and nanometer scales.
The resolution in time and space is so good
that the mesoscopic properties are directly detectable on the experimental sample.
Numerous experiments have manifested the role of fluctuations [1]. In the case of surface reactions, transient
effects associated with local pattern formation have been observed by applying scanning tunneling microscopy (STM)
[2,3]. Field ion microscopy (FIM) is used to obtain nanoscale information on the occurrence of kinetic instabilities
with sustained oscillations, propagating waves and explosive behavior on catalytic supports [4]. The coupling with
atom probe method gives informations on the chemical nature of the processes involved. The novel technique of
digital high-speed microscopic video recording allows in-situ observations of rapid processes such as high
temperature heterogeneous reactions used in the synthesis of advanced materials [5]. Moreover, a large amount of work
has been performed to extract the statistical properties of fluctuations thanks to appropriate treatment of collected
experimental data [6,7].
The dynamical aspects of meso and nanophenomena are particularly interesting [8-11]. Numerous investigations
have recently been developed to explain experimental results, to explore the applicability of theoretical approaches
and to develop appropriate modeling [12-18]. In this respect, nanostructured
chemical systems provide good examples for such study since reactive processes act as a generator of complexity.
Moreover it is now
well established that the stochastic approach of reactive systems and related numerical methods are well
suited to treat these
systems [19]. Problems related to transport phenomena are very significant at this scale.
Understanding the diffusion process on the
surface or in a solid, using an appropriate mesoscopic description and extracting kinetic pathways from microscopic
information, explaining the growth of nanostructures by cluster deposition are challenging problems
[20-25]. Another important problem is how to describe a porous nanostructured support using the
standard tools of macroscopic theory for instance in the case of thermal conduction [26]. The relation between
heterogeneity, stochasticity and transport has to be considered [27,28].
Discovering the microscopic mechanisms involved in meso and nanophenomena [29] and exploring the
coupling between
the mesoscopic level and the collective behavior are very actual problems to be addressed in this meeting.
References
[1] R. Imbihl
" Fluctuations in catalytic surface reactions",
New J. Phys. , 5 , no. 62 (2003)
[2] S. V\"olkening and J. Wintterlin
"CO oxidation on Pt(111) - Scanning tunneling microscopy
experiments and Monte Carlo simulations"
J. Chem. Phys. , 114 , 6382 (2001)
[3]B.L.M. Hendriksen et J.W.M. Frenken,
"CO oxidation on Pt(110): scanning tunneling microscopy
inside high-pressure flow reactor",
Phys. Rev. Lett. , 89 , 04601 (2002)
[4] T. Visart de Bocarm\'e and N. Kruse,
" CO oxidation on Gold Surfaces Studied on the Atomistic Scale",
Catalysis Letters , 74 , 127 (2001)
[5] A. Varma, A.S. Rogachev, A.S. Mukaysan and S. Hwang,
"Complex behavior of self-propagating
reaction waves in heterogeneous media",
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. , 95 , 11053 (1998)
[6] Yu. Suchorski, J. Beben and R. Imbhil,
"Spatio-temporal dynamics of fluctuations in a surface reaction
by Karhunen-Loeve decomposition of field emission images"
Surface Science , 454-456 , 331 (2000)
[7] A.S. Mukaysan}, A.S. Rogachev and A. Varma,
"Mechanisms of reaction wave propagatoin during
combustion synthesis of advanced materials",
Chem. Eng. Sc. , 54 , 3357 (1999)
[8] R. Reigada, F. Sagu\'es and A.S. Mikhailov,
"Traveling waves and nonequilibrium stationary
patterns in two-component reactive Langmuir monolayers",
Phys. Rev. Lett. , 89 , 038301-1 (2002)
[9] M. Pagitsas, A. Diamantopoulou and D. Sazou,
"A point defect model for the general and pitting
corrosion on Iron electrolyte interface deduced from current oscillations",
Chaos Soliton Fract. , 17 , 263 (2003)
[10] C. J. Hemming and R. Kapral
" Front explosions in three-dimensional resonantly-forced oscillatory
systems",
Phys. Rev. E , 68 , 026203 (2003)
[11] P. Gaspard,
"The correlation time of mesoscopic chemical clocks",
J. Chem. Phys. , 117 , 8905 (2002)
[12] N. Pavlenko, J. W. Evans, D. J. Liu and R. Imbihl
" Catalytic CO oxidation on nanoscale Pt
Facets: Effect of interfacet CO diffusion on bifurcation and fluctuation behavior",
Phys. Rev. E , 65 , 016121
(2002)
[13]S. Brosda and C.G. Vayenas
" Rules and mathematical modeling of electrochemical and
classical promotion: modelling",
J. Catal. , 204 , 23 (2002)
[14] Y. De Decker, F. Baras, N. Kruse and G. Nicolis
"Modeling the $NO+H_2$ reaction on a Pt
field emitter tip: Mean-field analysis and Monte Carlo simulations",
J. Chem. Phys. , 117 , 10244 (2002)
[15] A. Provata, G. A. Tsekouras, F. Baras, F. Diakonos, D. Frantzeskakis,A. Shabunin, V. Astakhov,
"Noise-induced local oscillators and fractal patterns in the Lattice Limit Cycle model",
Fluctuations and Noise
Letters , 3 , 241 (2003)
[16] E. Abad, A. Provata and G. Nicolis
"Reactive dynamics on fractal sets: Anomalous
fluctuations and memory effects",
Europhys. Lett. , 61 , 586 (2003)
[17] A. Provata and G. A. Tsekouras
"Spontaneous formation of dynamical patterns with fractal fronts in
the cyclic Lattice Lotka-Volterra model",
Phys. Rev. E , 67 , 056602 (2003)
[18] A. S. Rogachev, A. S. Mukasyan and A. Varma
"Volume combustion models in heterogeneous
reaction systems",
J. Mater. Synth. Proces. , 10 , 31 (2002)
[19] Stochastic processes in physics, chemistry and biology,
J.A. Freund and T. P\"oschel Eds
Lectures
Notes in Physics 557, Springer (2000)
[20] J.V. Barth
"Transport of adsorbates at metal surfaces: from thermal migration to hot precusors",
Surf. Sc. Reports , 40 , 75 (2000)
[21] J. W. Evans, D. J. Liu and M. Tammaro
"From atomistic Lattice-gas
Models for Surface Reactions to Hydrodynamics Reaction-Diffusion Equations",
Chaos, , 12 , 131 (2002)
[22] Y. Le Bouar and F. Soisson
"Kinetic pathways from embedded-atom-method potentials: Influence of the
activation barriers",
Phys. Rev. B , 65 , 094103 (2002)
[23]P. Jensen
"Growth of nanostructures by cluster deposition: Experiments and simple models",
Rev. Mod. Phys. , 71 , 1695 (1999)
[24] H. Nakao and A. S. Mikhailov
"Statistics of rare strong bursts
in autocatalytic stochastic growth with diffusion",
Chaos , 13 , 953 (2003)
[25] F. Coppex, M. Droz, and A. Lipowski
"Dynamics of the breakdown of
granular clusters",
Phys. Rev. E , 66 , 011305 (2002)
[26] L.M. Sander, C.P. Warren and I.M. Sokolov
{\bf 325}, 1 (2003)
"Epidemics, disorder and percolation",
Physica A , 325 , 1 (2003)
[27] P. Chantrenne and J.-L. Barrat
"Finite size effects in determination of thermal conductivities:
comparing molecular dynamics results with simple models",
submitted to Journal of Heat Transfer
[28] N. Provatas et al.,
"Phase-field model for activated reaction fronts",
Phys. Rev. B , 53 , 6263 (1996)
[29] P. Kratzer
"Atomistic simulations of processes at surfaces"
in Challenges in Predictive Process
Simulations, J. Dabrowski Ed., Springer Verlag (2003)