Shear-induced depinning of thin droplets on rough substrates

Depinning of liquid droplets on substrates by flow of a surrounding immiscible fluid is central to applications such as cross-flow microemulsification, oil recovery and waste cleanup. Surface roughness, either natural or engineered, can cause droplet pinning, so it is of both fundamental and practic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of fluid mechanics 2024-08, Vol.990
Hauptverfasser: Mhatre, Ninad V., Kumar, Satish
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Kumar, Satish
description Depinning of liquid droplets on substrates by flow of a surrounding immiscible fluid is central to applications such as cross-flow microemulsification, oil recovery and waste cleanup. Surface roughness, either natural or engineered, can cause droplet pinning, so it is of both fundamental and practical interest to determine the flow strength of the surrounding fluid required for droplet depinning on rough substrates. Here, we develop a lubrication-theory-based model for droplet depinning on a substrate with topographical defects by flow of a surrounding immiscible fluid. The droplet and surrounding fluid are in a rectangular channel, a pressure gradient is imposed to drive flow and the defects are modelled as Gaussian-shaped bumps. Using a precursor-film/disjoining-pressure approach to capture contact-line motion, a nonlinear evolution equation is derived describing the droplet thickness as a function of distance along the channel and time. Numerical solutions of the evolution equation are used to investigate how the critical pressure gradient for droplet depinning depends on the viscosity ratio, surface wettability and droplet volume. Simple analytical models are able to account for many of the features observed in the numerical simulations. The influence of defect height is also investigated, and it is found that, when the maximum defect slope is larger than the receding contact angle of the droplet, smaller residual droplets are left behind at the defect after the original droplet depins and slides away. The model presented here yields considerably more information than commonly used models based on simple force balances, and provides a framework that can readily be extended to study more complicated situations involving chemical heterogeneity and three-dimensional effects.
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Surface roughness, either natural or engineered, can cause droplet pinning, so it is of both fundamental and practical interest to determine the flow strength of the surrounding fluid required for droplet depinning on rough substrates. Here, we develop a lubrication-theory-based model for droplet depinning on a substrate with topographical defects by flow of a surrounding immiscible fluid. The droplet and surrounding fluid are in a rectangular channel, a pressure gradient is imposed to drive flow and the defects are modelled as Gaussian-shaped bumps. Using a precursor-film/disjoining-pressure approach to capture contact-line motion, a nonlinear evolution equation is derived describing the droplet thickness as a function of distance along the channel and time. Numerical solutions of the evolution equation are used to investigate how the critical pressure gradient for droplet depinning depends on the viscosity ratio, surface wettability and droplet volume. Simple analytical models are able to account for many of the features observed in the numerical simulations. The influence of defect height is also investigated, and it is found that, when the maximum defect slope is larger than the receding contact angle of the droplet, smaller residual droplets are left behind at the defect after the original droplet depins and slides away. 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subjects Contact angle
Contact pressure
Critical pressure
Cross flow
Defects
Droplets
Evolution
Fluid flow
Heterogeneity
JFM Papers
Miscibility
Nonlinear evolution equations
Numerical models
Oil recovery
Pressure gradients
Substrates
Surface roughness
Topography
Viscosity
Viscosity ratio
Wettability
title Shear-induced depinning of thin droplets on rough substrates
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