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Book Synopsis
The formation, deformation, and break-up of liquid interfaces are ubiquitous phenomena in nature. In the present book the authors discuss the deformation of a liquid interface produced by optical radiation forces. Usually, the bending of such an interface by the radiation pressure of a c.w. laser beam is weak. However, the effect can be enhanced significantly if one works with a near-critical phase-separated liquid mixture, whereby the surface tension becomes weak. The bending may in this way become as large as several tenths of micrometers, even with the use of only moderate laser power. This near-criticality is a key element in our experimental investigations as reviewed in the article. The effect is achieved by working with a micellar phase of microemulsions, at room temperature. The authors give a brief survey of the theory of electromagnetic forces on continuous matter, and survey earlier experiments in this area, such as the Ashkin-Dziedzic optical radiation force experiment on a water/air surface, the Zhang-Chang experiment on the laser-induced deformation of a micrometer-sized spherical water droplet, and the experiment of Sakai et al. measuring surface tensions of interfaces in a non-contact manner. Thereafter, the authors survey results they obtained in recent years by performing experiments on near-critical interfaces, such as interface bending in the linear regime, stationary large deformations of liquid interfaces, asymmetric pressure effects on interfaces under intense illumination, non-linear deformations, and laser-sustained liquid columns.

Optical Deformability of Fluid Interfaces

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A Paperback / softback by Jean-Pierre Delville

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    View other formats and editions of Optical Deformability of Fluid Interfaces by Jean-Pierre Delville

    Publisher: Nova Science Publishers Inc
    Publication Date: 14/08/2009
    ISBN13: 9781606924310, 978-1606924310
    ISBN10: 1606924311

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    The formation, deformation, and break-up of liquid interfaces are ubiquitous phenomena in nature. In the present book the authors discuss the deformation of a liquid interface produced by optical radiation forces. Usually, the bending of such an interface by the radiation pressure of a c.w. laser beam is weak. However, the effect can be enhanced significantly if one works with a near-critical phase-separated liquid mixture, whereby the surface tension becomes weak. The bending may in this way become as large as several tenths of micrometers, even with the use of only moderate laser power. This near-criticality is a key element in our experimental investigations as reviewed in the article. The effect is achieved by working with a micellar phase of microemulsions, at room temperature. The authors give a brief survey of the theory of electromagnetic forces on continuous matter, and survey earlier experiments in this area, such as the Ashkin-Dziedzic optical radiation force experiment on a water/air surface, the Zhang-Chang experiment on the laser-induced deformation of a micrometer-sized spherical water droplet, and the experiment of Sakai et al. measuring surface tensions of interfaces in a non-contact manner. Thereafter, the authors survey results they obtained in recent years by performing experiments on near-critical interfaces, such as interface bending in the linear regime, stationary large deformations of liquid interfaces, asymmetric pressure effects on interfaces under intense illumination, non-linear deformations, and laser-sustained liquid columns.

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