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Journal ArticleDOI

Disintegration of Water Drops in an Electric Field

Geoffrey Ingram Taylor
- 28 Jul 1964 - 
- Vol. 280, Iss: 1382, pp 383-397
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TLDR
In this article, it was shown that a conical interface between two fluids can exist in equilibrium in an electric field, but only when the cone has a semi-vertical angle 49.3$^\circ$.
Abstract
The disintegration of drops in strong electric fields is believed to play an important part in the formation of thunderstorms, at least in those parts of them where no ice crystals are present. Zeleny showed experimentally that disintegration begins as a hydrodynamical instability, but his ideas about the mechanics of the situation rest on the implicit assumption that instability occurs when the internal pressure is the same as that outside the drop. It is shown that this assumption is false and that instability of an elongated drop would not occur unless a pressure difference existed. When this error is corrected it is found that a drop, elongated by an electric field, becomes unstable when its length is 1.9 times its equatorial diameter, and the calculated critical electric field agrees with laboratory experiments to within 1%. When the drop becomes unstable the ends develop obtuse-angled conical points from which axial jets are projected but the stability calculations give no indication of the mechanics of this process. It is shown theoretically that a conical interface between two fluids can exist in equilibrium in an electric field, but only when the cone has a semi-vertical angle 49.3$^\circ$. Apparatus was constructed for producing the necessary field, and photographs show that conical oil/water interfaces and soap films can be produced at the caloulated voltage and that their semi-vertical angles are very close to 49.3$^\circ$. The photographs give an indication of how the axial jets are produced but no complete analytical description of the process is attempted.

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Citations
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Existence and Stability for a Non-Local Isoperimetric Model of Charged Liquid Drops

TL;DR: In this article, a variational problem related to the shape of charged liquid drops at equilibrium is considered and it is shown that this problem never admits local minimizers with respect to L 1 perturbations preserving the volume.
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Electrochemical Aspects of Electrospray and Laser Desorption/Ionization for Mass Spectrometry

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that having good control over both types of electrochemical reactions can lead to new analytical applications, such as online tagging by grafting of mass tags and in-source photooxidation of peptides.
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The Development and Bio-applications of Multifluid Electrospinning

TL;DR: In this paper, the development of multifluid electrospinning processes, including coaxial, Janus and triaxial electro-spinning, and the applications of these techniques are summarized.
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Core-Liquid-Induced Transition from Coaxial Electrospray to Electrospinning of Low-Viscosity Poly(lactide-co-glycolide) Sheath Solution

TL;DR: In this article, the authors showed that without increasing the polymer concentration/molecular weight or needing a template polymer, simply infusing a liquid in the core nozzle can cause the sheath polymer solution (viscosity <20 mPa s) to electrospin instead of electrospray in a coaxial electrified jet.
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Electrohydrodynamic Comminution: A Novel Technique for the Aerosolisation of Plasmid DNA

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References
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The theory of sound

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Legendre functions of fractional order

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the behavior of the Legendre functions of non-integral order (P„(cos 6), where n and m are restricted to integral values.