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Journal ArticleDOI

Moving contact lines and rivulet instabilities. Part 1. The static rivulet

Stephen H. Davis
- 29 May 1980 - 
- Vol. 98, Iss: 2, pp 225-242
TLDR
In this paper, a linearized stability theory for small, static rivulets whose contact (common or three-phase) lines (i) are fixed, (ii) move but have fixed contact angles or (iii) have contact angles smooth functions of contact-line speeds is presented.
Abstract
A rivulet is a narrow stream of liquid located on a solid surface and sharing a curved interface with the surrounding gas. Capillary instabilities are investigated by a linearized stability theory. The formulation is for small, static rivulets whose contact (common or three-phase) lines (i) are fixed, (ii) move but have fixed contact angles or (iii) move but have contact angles smooth functions of contact-line speeds. The linearized stability equations are converted to a disturbance kinetic-energy balance showing that the disturbance response exactly satisfies a damped linear harmonic-oscillator equation. The ‘damping coefficient’ contains the bulk viscous dissipation, the effect of slip along the solid and all dynamic effects that arise in contact-line condition (iii). The ‘spring constant’, whose sign determines stability or instability in the system, incorporates the interfacial area changes and is identical in cases (ii) and (iii). Thus, for small disturbances changes in contact angle with contact-line speed constitute a purely dissipative process. All the above results are independent of slip model at the liquid–solid interface as long as a certain integral inequality holds. Finally, sufficient conditions for stability are obtained in all cases (i), (ii) and (iii).

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Citations
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Consolidation phenomena in laser and powder-bed based layered manufacturing

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Principles of microfluidic actuation by modulation of surface stresses

TL;DR: In this paper, the principles underlying common techniques for actuation of droplets and films on homogeneous, chemically patterned, and topologically textured surfaces by modulation of normal or shear stresses are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Moving contact lines in liquid/liquid/solid systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the Young equation is used to describe the motion of an interface between immiscible viscous fluids along a smooth homogeneous solid surface in the case of small capillary and Reynolds numbers, and an analytical expression for the dependence of the dynamic contact angle on the contact-line speed and parameters characterizing properties of contacting media is derived.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the motion of a fluid-fluid interface along a solid surface

TL;DR: In this article, a fluid-fluid interface that joins a solid surface forms a common line and if the common line moves along the solid, a mutual displacement process is involved and is studied here.
Journal ArticleDOI

A moving fluid interface. Part 2. The removal of the force singularity by a slip flow

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of a slip coefficient on the flow in the neighbourhood of the contact line was examined, and the contribution of the vicinity of a contact line to the force on the boundary was obtained.
Journal ArticleDOI

The steady movement of a liquid meniscus in a capillary tube

TL;DR: In this paper, the steady movement of a liquid meniscus in a circular capillary tube has been examined theoretically for dynamic contact angles close to 90° with minute slippage of the liquid on the solid, thus relaxing the conventional no-slip boundary condition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrodynamics of rivulet flow

TL;DR: A theoretical analysis of the hydrodynamics of liquid rivulets flowing down an inclined surface is presented in this article, where steady state solutions are developed for the laminar flow case which relate the flow rate to the rivulet width, the physical properties of the liquid, and the contact angle.
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