scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

On the collision of a droplet with a solid surface

Sanjeev Chandra, +1 more
- 08 Jan 1991 - 
- Vol. 432, Iss: 1884, pp 13-41
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the collision dynamics of a liquid droplet on a solid metallic surface were studied using a flash photographic method, which provided clear images of the droplet structure during the deformation process.
Abstract
The collision dynamics of a liquid droplet on a solid metallic surface were studied using a flash photographic method. The intent was to provide clear images of the droplet structure during the deformation process. The ambient pressure (0.101 MPa), surface material (polished stainless steel), initial droplet diameter (about 1.5 mm), liquid (n-heptane) and impact Weber number (43) were fixed. The primary parameter was the surface temperature, which ranged from 24 degrees C to above the Leidenfrost temperature of the liquid. Experiments were also performed on a droplet impacting a surface on which there existed a liquid film created by deposition of a prior droplet. The evolution of wetted area and spreading rate, both of a droplet on a stainless steel surface and of a droplet spreading over a thin liquid film, were found to be independent of surface temperature during the early period of impact. This result was attributed to negligible surface tension and viscous effects, and in consequence the measurements made during the early period of the impact process were in good agreement with previously published analyses which neglected these effects. A single bubble was observed to form within the droplet during impact at low temperatures. As surface temperature was increased the population of bubbles within the droplet also increased because of progressive activation of nucleation sites on the stainless steel surface. At surface temperatures near to the boiling point of heptane, a spoke-like cellular structure in the liquid was created during the spreading process by coalescence of a ring of bubbles that had formed within the droplet. At higher temperatures, but below the Leidenfrost point, numerous bubbles appeared within the droplet, yet the overall droplet shape, particularly in the early stages of impact (< 0.8 ms), was unaffected by the presence of these bubbles. The maximum value of the diameter of liquid which spreads on the surface is shown to agree with predictions from a simplified model.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Simulation of impact of a hollow droplet on a flat surface

TL;DR: In this paper, a numerical study for the impact of a hollow droplet on a flat surface is presented, which considers the transient flow dynamics during impact and spreading of the droplet using the volume of fluid surface tracking method (VOF) coupled with the momentum transport model within a one-domain continuum formulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact dynamics of particle-coated droplets.

TL;DR: Using dual-view high-speed imaging, details of the impact dynamics previously not reported are revealed, including no significant difference in the maximum spread between hydrophobic and hydrophilic targets, which is rationalized by the presence of the particles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pattern analysis of a single droplet impinging onto a heated plate

TL;DR: In this paper, the impingement phenomena of a single droplet onto a heated plate for We <200 were experimentally classified as five different characteristic patterns in the literature, i.e., completely wet, completely dry, wet film boiling, transition, dry rebounding, and satellite dry recovering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ink Jet Printing for Direct Mask Deposition in Printed Circuit Board Fabrication

TL;DR: In this paper, an early-stage impact-driven spread- ing of 80 pl drops of UV ink and phase change resist was imaged by 20 ns duration flash-based photography, while a 27,000 fps high- speed camera was used to study the later stages of spreading up to 130 ms postimpact.
Journal ArticleDOI

Droplet Impact on the Super-Hydrophobic Surface with Micro-Pillar Arrays Fabricated by Hybrid Laser Ablation and Silanization Process.

TL;DR: The maximum spreading factor of water droplets impacting on the pillar-patterned super-hydrophobic surface based on the energy conservation concept was deduced from the perspective of energy balance, and the predicted results were in good agreement with the experimental results.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface Tension as the Cause of Bénard Cells and Surface Deformation in a Liquid Film

Myron J. Block
- 01 Sep 1956 - 
TL;DR: Benard as mentioned in this paper observed a cellular deformation produced on the free surface of a liquid film the bottom surface of which (in contact with a floor) was uniformly heated and hotter than its top surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Homogeneous Nucleation Limits of Liquids

TL;DR: In this article, a critical compilation of the homogeneous nucleation limits of liquids is provided, where data for 90 pure substances and 28 mixtures have been compiled over a range of pressures, nucleation rates, and compositions.
Related Papers (5)