General information
            
            
                
                
                
                    
                        Organisation
                    
                    The French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) is a key player in research, development and innovation in four main areas :
• defence and security,
• nuclear energy (fission and fusion),
• technological research for industry,
• fundamental research in the physical sciences and life sciences.
Drawing on its widely acknowledged expertise, and thanks to its 16000 technicians, engineers, researchers and staff, the CEA actively participates in collaborative projects with a large number of academic and industrial partners.
The CEA is established in ten centers spread throughout France
  
                
                
                    
                        Reference
                    
                    SL-DRF-26-0318  
                
        
                
                
                
                
             
	Direction
DRF
Thesis topic details
	Category
Condensed Matter Physics, chemistry, nanosciences
	Thesis topics
Understanding the signals emitted by moving liquids
	Contract
Thèse
	Job description
	Elasticity is one of the oldest physical properties of condensed matter. It is expressed by a constant of proportionality G between the applied stress (s) and the deformation (?): s = G.? (Hooke's law). The absence of resistance to shear deformation (G' = 0) indicates liquid-like behavior (Maxwell model). Long considered specific to solids, shear elasticity has recently been identified in liquids at the submillimeter scale [1].
The identification of liquid shear elasticity (non-zero G') is a promise of discoveries of new liquid properties. For example, do we know that a confined liquid changes temperature under flow? Yet no classical model (Poiseuille, Navier-Stokes, Maxwell) predicts the effect because without long-range correlation between molecules (i.e. without elasticity), the flow is dissipative, therefore athermal. For a change in temperature to be flow induced (without a heat source), the liquid must have elasticity and this elasticity must be stressed [1,2].
The PhD thesis will explore how the mechanical energy of the flow is converted in a thermal response [2]. We will exploit the capacity of conversion to develop a new generation of microfluidic devices (patent FR2206312).
We will also explore the impact of the wetting on the liquid flow, and reciprocally, we will examine how the liquid flow modifies the solid dynamics (THz) of the substrate [3]. Powerful methods only available in Very Large Research Facilities such as the ILL will be used to probe the non-equilibrium state of solid phonons. Finally, we will strengthen our existing collaborations with theoreticians.
The PhD topic is related to wetting, macroscopic thermal effects, phonon dynamics and liquid transport.
1. A. Zaccone, K. Trachenko, “Explaining the low-frequency shear elasticity of confined liquids' PNAS, 117 (2020) 19653–19655. Doi:10.1073/pnas.2010787117
2. E. Kume, P. Baroni, L. Noirez, “Strain-induced violation of temperature uniformity in mesoscale liquids” Sci. Rep. 10 13340 (2020). Doi : 10.1038/s41598-020-69404-1.
3. M. Warburton, J. Ablett, P. Baroni, JP Rueff, L. Paolasini, L. Noirez, “Identification by Inelastic X-Ray scattering of bulk alteration of solid dynamics due to Liquid Wetting”, J. of Molecular Liquids 391 (2023) 123342202
 
	University / doctoral school
Ondes et Matière (EDOM)
Paris-Saclay
Thesis topic location
	Site
Saclay
Requester
	Position start date
01/10/2026
	Person to be contacted by the applicant
NOIREZ Laurence 
 noirez@llb.saclay.cea.fr
CNRS-UMR 12
LLB01/Laboratoire de Diffusion Neutronique
CEA/Saclay
 01 69 08 63 00
	Tutor / Responsible thesis director
NOIREZ Laurence 
 noirez@llb.saclay.cea.fr
CNRS-UMR 12
LLB01/Laboratoire de Diffusion Neutronique
CEA/Saclay
 01 69 08 63 00
	En savoir plus
https://iramis.cea.fr/pisp/laurence-noirez-fr/
https://iramis.cea.fr/llb/nfmq/
https://iramis.cea.fr/llb/