CIFICEN   24414
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIONES EN FISICA E INGENIERIA DEL CENTRO DE LA PROVINCIA DE BUENOS AIRES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Thermocapillary migration of droplets under molecular and gravitational forces
Autor/es:
CORREA, P. G.; MAC INTYRE J. R.; SELLIER M,; GOMBA, J. M.; PERAZZO, CARLOS ALBERTO
Revista:
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Editorial:
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Referencias:
Lugar: Cambridge; Año: 2018 vol. 847 p. 1 - 27
ISSN:
0022-1120
Resumen:
We study the thermocapillary migration of two-dimensional droplets of partially wetting liquids on a non-uniformly heated surface. The effect of a non-zero contact angle is imposed through a disjoining-conjoining pressure term. The numerical results for two different molecular interactions are compared: on the one hand, London-van der Waals and ionic-electrostatics molecular interactions that account for polar liquids; on the other hand, long and short-range molecular forces that model molecular interactions of nonpolar fluids. In addition, the effect of gravity on the velocity of the drop is analysed.We find that for small contact angles, the long-time dynamics is independent of the molecular potential, and the footprint of the droplet increases with the square root of time. For intermediate contact angles we observe that polar droplets are more likely to break up into smaller volumes than non-polar ones. A linear stability analysis allows to predict the number of droplets after breakup occurs. In this regime, the effect of gravity is stabilizing: it reduces the growth rates of the unstable modes and increases the shortest unstable wavelength. When breakup is not observed, the droplet moves steadily with aprofile that consists in a capillary ridge followed by a film of constant thickness, for which we find power law dependencies with the cross sectional area of the droplet, the contact angle and the temperature gradients. For large contact angles, non-polar liquids move faster than polar ones, and the velocity is proportional to the Marangoni stress. We find power law dependencies for the velocity for the different regimes of flow. The numerical results allow us to shed light to experimental facts such as the origin of the elongation of droplets and the existence of saturation velocity.