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Main Authors: Burian, Sergii, Shportun, Yevhenii, Klochko, Liudmyla, Bulavin, Leonid, Gavryushenko, Dmytro, Isaiev, Mykola
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.13244
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author Burian, Sergii
Shportun, Yevhenii
Klochko, Liudmyla
Bulavin, Leonid
Gavryushenko, Dmytro
Isaiev, Mykola
author_facet Burian, Sergii
Shportun, Yevhenii
Klochko, Liudmyla
Bulavin, Leonid
Gavryushenko, Dmytro
Isaiev, Mykola
contents The size-dependent liquid-vapor surface tension controls phase change, wetting, and transport at nanoscales, yet its first curvature correction, the Tolman length, remains difficult to determine. We develop a thermodynamic and statistical-mechanical framework that relates this correction to bulk response properties of a one-component liquid near liquid-vapor coexistence. For curved interfaces, the analysis considers two local formulations of the same capillary-chemical balance, in excess pressures and in relative density deviations. For weakly compressible liquids in the regime emphasized here, the adopted asymmetric density-based formulation is the practically relevant one, with finite-curvature effects entering through vapor supersaturation under capillary equilibrium. At coexistence, the planar-limit value of the same Tolman length reduces to a combination of the liquid isothermal compressibility and its pressure derivative and can be recast as a bulk fluctuation-response observable of the homogeneous liquid in the isothermal-isobaric ensemble. In this representation, the planar-limit coefficient is determined by second and third central moments of the volume distribution, equivalently by the pressure response of the relative fluctuation width. For water, homogeneous (N,P,T) simulations of SPC/E and TIP4P/2005 sample the bulk liquid, not an explicit liquid-vapor interface, and yield estimates near -0.7 Angstrom at 300 K. An independent evaluation based on the IAPWS-IF97 industrial formulation gives -0.713 +/- 0.004 Angstrom at the same coexistence state and predicts a weakly nonmonotonic temperature dependence along coexistence. Beyond water, the framework applies to other one-component liquids in regimes where an accurate thermal equation of state or sufficiently converged bulk volume statistics are available.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_13244
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Fluctuation-Dissipation Framework for Size-Dependent Surface Tension
Burian, Sergii
Shportun, Yevhenii
Klochko, Liudmyla
Bulavin, Leonid
Gavryushenko, Dmytro
Isaiev, Mykola
Soft Condensed Matter
Statistical Mechanics
Chemical Physics
The size-dependent liquid-vapor surface tension controls phase change, wetting, and transport at nanoscales, yet its first curvature correction, the Tolman length, remains difficult to determine. We develop a thermodynamic and statistical-mechanical framework that relates this correction to bulk response properties of a one-component liquid near liquid-vapor coexistence. For curved interfaces, the analysis considers two local formulations of the same capillary-chemical balance, in excess pressures and in relative density deviations. For weakly compressible liquids in the regime emphasized here, the adopted asymmetric density-based formulation is the practically relevant one, with finite-curvature effects entering through vapor supersaturation under capillary equilibrium. At coexistence, the planar-limit value of the same Tolman length reduces to a combination of the liquid isothermal compressibility and its pressure derivative and can be recast as a bulk fluctuation-response observable of the homogeneous liquid in the isothermal-isobaric ensemble. In this representation, the planar-limit coefficient is determined by second and third central moments of the volume distribution, equivalently by the pressure response of the relative fluctuation width. For water, homogeneous (N,P,T) simulations of SPC/E and TIP4P/2005 sample the bulk liquid, not an explicit liquid-vapor interface, and yield estimates near -0.7 Angstrom at 300 K. An independent evaluation based on the IAPWS-IF97 industrial formulation gives -0.713 +/- 0.004 Angstrom at the same coexistence state and predicts a weakly nonmonotonic temperature dependence along coexistence. Beyond water, the framework applies to other one-component liquids in regimes where an accurate thermal equation of state or sufficiently converged bulk volume statistics are available.
title Fluctuation-Dissipation Framework for Size-Dependent Surface Tension
topic Soft Condensed Matter
Statistical Mechanics
Chemical Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.13244