Modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly

Theoretical descriptions of charged induced polarisation and dispersion forces between materials are investigated, extended or applied to study a range of natural and novel environments. Initially, a mathematical framework is established to describe many-body interactions between charged dielectric...

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Main Author: Williamson, Connor
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80397/
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author Williamson, Connor
author_facet Williamson, Connor
author_sort Williamson, Connor
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Theoretical descriptions of charged induced polarisation and dispersion forces between materials are investigated, extended or applied to study a range of natural and novel environments. Initially, a mathematical framework is established to describe many-body interactions between charged dielectric particles. This framework is then extended to include the effects of inhomogeneous sur- face charge distributions and externally applied electric fields. This extension is rigorously tested against classical results and then further justified for N particles by considering a novel experimentally realised system. The framework is then applied to study the effect of surface charge density and polarisation on the interactions between like-charged particles in noctilucent clouds. Like-charge attraction is shown to promote nucleation of such particles given the possible velocities at the temperature of these environments. Volcanic ash is then investigated in a similar context at the various temperatures it would experience throughout an eruption. Aggregation of volcanic ash due to non-thermal perturbation is also investigated by considering the collisional cross sections of the clouds constituents via particle dynamics. Particle dynamics is then utilised to study the aggregation driven inefficiencies of dry powder inhalers, suggesting a possible method to alleviate this. The electronic interaction of neutral materials at close separation is then investigated in the context of the Casimir force. After an initial bench-marking of a convenient mathematical formalism, new systems in which quantum levitation can be realised are predicted via consideration of the Casimir equilibrium.
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spelling nottingham-803972025-07-24T04:40:08Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80397/ Modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly Williamson, Connor Theoretical descriptions of charged induced polarisation and dispersion forces between materials are investigated, extended or applied to study a range of natural and novel environments. Initially, a mathematical framework is established to describe many-body interactions between charged dielectric particles. This framework is then extended to include the effects of inhomogeneous sur- face charge distributions and externally applied electric fields. This extension is rigorously tested against classical results and then further justified for N particles by considering a novel experimentally realised system. The framework is then applied to study the effect of surface charge density and polarisation on the interactions between like-charged particles in noctilucent clouds. Like-charge attraction is shown to promote nucleation of such particles given the possible velocities at the temperature of these environments. Volcanic ash is then investigated in a similar context at the various temperatures it would experience throughout an eruption. Aggregation of volcanic ash due to non-thermal perturbation is also investigated by considering the collisional cross sections of the clouds constituents via particle dynamics. Particle dynamics is then utilised to study the aggregation driven inefficiencies of dry powder inhalers, suggesting a possible method to alleviate this. The electronic interaction of neutral materials at close separation is then investigated in the context of the Casimir force. After an initial bench-marking of a convenient mathematical formalism, new systems in which quantum levitation can be realised are predicted via consideration of the Casimir equilibrium. 2025-07-24 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80397/1/14276386_ConnorWilliamson_Thesis.pdf Williamson, Connor (2025) Modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. polarisation dispersion forces electronic interaction electrostatic interactions Casimir equilibrium
spellingShingle polarisation
dispersion forces
electronic interaction
electrostatic interactions
Casimir equilibrium
Williamson, Connor
Modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly
title Modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly
title_full Modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly
title_fullStr Modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly
title_full_unstemmed Modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly
title_short Modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly
title_sort modelling polarisation of materials with applications in self-assembly
topic polarisation
dispersion forces
electronic interaction
electrostatic interactions
Casimir equilibrium
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/80397/