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Hang Ding

Researcher at University of Science and Technology of China

Publications -  76
Citations -  4130

Hang Ding is an academic researcher from University of Science and Technology of China. The author has contributed to research in topics: Drop (liquid) & Wetting. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 67 publications receiving 3388 citations. Previous affiliations of Hang Ding include University of California, Santa Barbara & National University of Singapore.

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Diffuse interface model for incompressible two-phase flows with large density ratios

TL;DR: The convective Cahn-Hilliard equation and the condition that the velocity field is divergence-free are derived from the conservation law of mass of binary mixtures in a straightforward way, for fluids with large density and viscosity ratios.
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Local radial basis function-based differential quadrature method and its application to solve two-dimensional incompressible Navier–Stokes equations

TL;DR: In this article, a local radial basis function-based differential quadrature (LRQ) method is proposed, which discretizes any derivative at a knot by a weighted linear sum of functional values at its neighbouring knots, which may be distributed randomly.
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Pumping through Porous Hydrophobic/Oleophilic Materials: An Alternative Technology for Oil Spill Remediation

TL;DR: Based on this novel design, oil/water separation and oil collection can be simultaneously achieved in the remediation of oil spills, and the oil sorption capacity is no longer limited to the volume and weight of the sorption material.
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Wetting condition in diffuse interface simulations of contact line motion.

TL;DR: The wetting condition for diffuse-interface methods in the simulation of two-fluid flows with moving contact lines is investigated and a geometric formulation is proposed that does result in a slope of the interface consistent with the prescribed value of the contact angle.
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Numerical Simulations of Flows with Moving Contact Lines

TL;DR: The main models for moving contact lines are summarized and an overview of computational methods that includes direct continuum approaches and macroscale models that resolve only the large-scale flow by modeling the effects of the conditions near the contact line using theory are presented.