2017
DOI: 10.1103/physreve.95.042120
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Manipulation and amplification of the Casimir force through surface fields using helicity

Abstract: We present both exact and numerical results for the behavior of the Casimir force in O(n) systems with a finite extension in one direction when the system is subjected to surface fields that induce helicity in the order parameter. We show that for such systems the Casimir force in certain temperature ranges is of the order of L −2 , both above and below the critical temperature, Tc, of the bulk system. An example of such a system would be one with chemically modulated bounding surfaces, in which the modulation… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…As shown in Ref. [145], if the boundary fields are non-zero, the Casimir force F Cas of these systems displays a very rich and interesting behavior. It turns out that near T = 0 this force exhibits scaling and -depending on the angle between the vectorial boundary fields H 1 and H N , and on the value of the temperature scaling variable x ∝ Nk B T/J -the force can be attractive or repulsive.…”
Section: One-dimensional Models With Continuous Symmetry In the Prese...mentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…As shown in Ref. [145], if the boundary fields are non-zero, the Casimir force F Cas of these systems displays a very rich and interesting behavior. It turns out that near T = 0 this force exhibits scaling and -depending on the angle between the vectorial boundary fields H 1 and H N , and on the value of the temperature scaling variable x ∝ Nk B T/J -the force can be attractive or repulsive.…”
Section: One-dimensional Models With Continuous Symmetry In the Prese...mentioning
confidence: 84%
“…• one-dimensional Ising model [143] • one-dimensional XY model [144,145] • one-dimensional Heisenberg model [145] • two-dimensional Ising model [9,143, • three-dimensional Ising model [45,48,131,151, • three-dimensional XY model [48,145,151,181,183,205,206] • three-dimensional Heisenberg model [151] • three-and d-dimensional O(n → ∞) (spherical) model [9,13,151,179,[207][208][209][210][211][212][213][214][215][216] • Bose gas [121, • d-dimensional Gaussian model [9,115,145,151,224,237,238] • mean field model: [145,188,206,[239][240][241][242]…”
Section: Critical Casimir Effectmentioning
confidence: 99%
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