Habilitation for research supervision (HDR)
"Surveying Diffusion in Complex Geometries"


The HDR has been defended at Ecole Polytechnique on 12th May 2009 in front of the jury:

Prof. Bertrand DUPLANTIER Reviewer
Prof. Joseph KLAFTER Reviewer
Prof. Yves POMEAU Reviewer
Prof. Olivier BENICHOU Examiner
Prof. Jean-Philippe BOUCHAUD Examiner
Prof. Antoine GEORGES President of the jury
Prof. Pierre LEVITZ Invited member
Prof. Satya MAJUMDAR Invited member
Prof. Michel ZINSMEISTER Invited member

Abstract

The surrounding world surprises us by the beauty and variety of complex shapes that emerge from nanometric to macroscopic scales. Natural or manufactured materials (sandstones, sedimentary rocks and cement), colloidal solutions (proteins and DNA), biological cells, tissues and organs (lungs, kidneys and placenta), they all present irregularly shaped "scenes" for a fundamental transport "performance", that is, diffusion. Here, the geometrical complexity, entangled with the stochastic character of diffusive motion, results in numerous fascinating and sometimes unexpected effects like diffusion screening or localization. These effects control many diffusion-mediated processes that play an important role in heterogeneous catalysis (reaction rate and overall production), biochemical mechanisms (protein search and migration), electrochemistry (electrode-electrolyte impedance), growth phenomena (solidification, viscous fingering), oil recovery (structure of sedimentary rocks), or building industry (cement hardening). In spite of a long and rich history of academic and industrial research in this field, it is striking to see how little we know about diffusion in complex geometries, especially the one which occurs in three dimensions.

In this work, we present our recent results on restricted diffusion, and describe further research development through ongoing and future projects. We look into the role of geometrical complexity at different levels, from boundary microroughness to hierarchical structure and connectivity of the whole diffusion-confining domain. We develop a new approach which consists in combining fast random walk algorithms with spectral tools. Up to now, our research was mainly focused on studying diffusion in model complex geometries (von Koch boundaries, Kitaoka acinus, etc.), as well as on developing and testing spectral methods. From now on, we aim at extending this knowledge and at applying the accomplished arsenal of theoretical and numerical tools to structures found in nature and industry (X-ray microtomography 3D scans of a cement paste, 2D slices of human skin and the placenta, etc.).


You can download:

The certificate (in French) PDF (0.2 Mb)

The published manuscript (in English) PDF (0.9 Mb)

The report by Prof. B. Duplantier (in French) PDF (0.6 Mb)

The report by Prof. J. Klafter (in English) PDF (0.3 Mb)

The report by Prof. Y. Pomeau (in French) PDF (0.3 Mb)


Your appreciation can be sent to denis.grebenkov@polytechnique.edu
Last modified 04/11/2009

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