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Journal ArticleDOI

Moving contact lines in liquid/liquid/solid systems

Yulii D. Shikhmurzaev
- 10 Mar 1997 - 
- Vol. 334, Iss: 1, pp 211-249
TLDR
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.
Abstract
A general mathematical model which describes the motion of an interface between immiscible viscous fluids along a smooth homogeneous solid surface is examined in the case of small capillary and Reynolds numbers. The model stems from a conclusion that the Young equation, σ1 cos θ = σ2 − σ3, which expresses the balance of tangential projection of the forces acting on the three-phase contact line in terms of the surface tensions σi and the contact angle θ, together with the well-established experimental fact that the dynamic contact angle deviates from the static one, imply that the surface tensions of contacting interfaces in the immediate vicinity of the contact line deviate from their equilibrium values when the contact line is moving. The same conclusion also follows from the experimentally observed kinematics of the flow, which indicates that liquid particles belonging to interfaces traverse the three-phase interaction zone (i.e. the ‘contact line’) in a finite time and become elements of another interface – hence their surface properties have to relax to new equilibrium values giving rise to the surface tension gradients in the neighbourhood of the moving contact line. The kinematic picture of the flow also suggests that the contact-line motion is only a particular case of a more general phenomenon – the process of interface formation or disappearance – and the corresponding mathematical model should be derived from first principles for this general process and then applied to wetting as well as to other relevant flows. In the present paper, the simplest theory which uses this approach is formulated and applied to the moving contact-line problem. The model describes the true kinematics of the flow so that it allows for the ‘splitting’ of the free surface at the contact line, the appearance of the surface tension gradients near the contact line and their influence upon the contact angle and the flow field. 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 and examined. The role of a ‘thin’ microscopic residual film formed by adsorbed molecules of the receding fluid is considered. The flow field in the vicinity of the contact line is analysed. The results are compared with experimental data obtained for different fluid/liquid/solid systems.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The physics of moving wetting lines

TL;DR: This paper seeks to offer a status report on the current approaches to wetting dynamics, to briefly review each of theCurrent approaches, to illustrate their successes and limitations as revealed by experiment and simulation, and to suggest ways in which the different aspects of wetts dynamics might be investigated in the future.
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Contact angle hysteresis: a review of fundamentals and applications

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the formalism and models for implementing contact angle hysteresis into relevant physical phenomena, such as sliding drops, coffee stain phenomenon (in general evaporative self-assembly), and curtain and wire coating techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI

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

Dynamic contact angle of spreading droplets: Experiments and simulations

TL;DR: In this article, a single drop impact onto a dry, partially wettable substrate and its numerical simulation was investigated. And the authors showed that existing empirical models for the dynamic contact angle (e.g., Hoffman-Voinov-Tanner law) do not predict well the change of dynamic contact angles, especially at high capillary numbers.
Journal ArticleDOI

A variational approach to moving contact line hydrodynamics

TL;DR: In this article, a variational derivation of the generalized Navier boundary condition (GNBC) was proposed to solve the problem of incompatibility between the moving contact line and the no-slip boundary condition, which leads to a nonintegrable singularity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Spreading of Liquids on Solid Surfaces: Static and Dynamic Contact Lines

TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that the mutual interaction between the three materials in the immediate vicinity of a contact line can significantly affect the statics as well as the dynamics of an entire flow field.

Liquids on solid surfaces: static and dynamic contact lines

E. B. Dussan
TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that the mutual interaction between the three materials in the immediate vicinity of a contact line can significantly affect the statics as well as the dynamics of an entire flow field.
Journal ArticleDOI

A study of the advancing interface. I. Interface shape in liquid—gas systems

TL;DR: In this article, the shape of the advancing liquid-air interface has been studied in a glass capillary over the range in which viscous and interfacial forces are the dominant factors controlling the system.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the motion of a small viscous droplet that wets a surface

TL;DR: In this paper, a model for the movement of a small viscous droplet on a surface is constructed that is based on the lubrication equations and uses the dynamic contact angle to describe the forces acting on the fluid at the contact line.