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Journal ArticleDOI

Thermocapillary migration of droplets under molecular and gravitational forces

TLDR
In this paper, the thermocapillary migration of two-dimensional droplets of partially wetting liquids on a non-uniformly heated surface is studied, and the effect of gravity on the velocity of the drop is analyzed.
Abstract
We study the thermocapillary migration of two-dimensional droplets of partially wetting liquids on a non-uniformly heated surface. The effect of a non-zero contact angle is imposed through a disjoining–conjoining pressure term. The numerical results for two different molecular interactions are compared: on the one hand, London–van der Waals and ionic–electrostatics molecular interactions that account for polar liquids; on the other hand, long- and short-range molecular forces that model molecular interactions of non-polar fluids. In addition, the effect of gravity on the velocity of the drop is analysed. We find that for small contact angles, the long-time dynamics is independent of the molecular potential, and the footprint of the droplet increases with the square root of time. For intermediate contact angles we observe that polar droplets are more likely to break up into smaller volumes than non-polar ones. A linear stability analysis allows us to predict the number of droplets after breakup occurs. In this regime, the effect of gravity is stabilizing: it reduces the growth rates of the unstable modes and increases the shortest unstable wavelength. When breakup is not observed, the droplet moves steadily with a profile that consists in a capillary ridge followed by a film of constant thickness, for which we find power law dependencies with the cross-sectional area of the droplet, the contact angle and the temperature gradients. For large contact angles, non-polar liquids move faster than polar ones, and the velocity is proportional to the Marangoni stress. We find power law dependencies for the velocity for the different regimes of flow. The numerical results allow us to shed light on experimental facts such as the origin of the elongation of droplets and the existence of saturation velocity.

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Journal Article

Regimes of thermocapillary migration of droplets under partial wetting conditions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the thermocapillary migration of two-dimensional droplets of partially wetting liquids on a non-uniform heated substrate and derived an equation for the thickness profile of the droplet by employing lubrication approximations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Directional interfacial motion of liquids: Fundamentals, evaluations, and manipulation strategies

TL;DR: In this article, a comparative review of the fundamentals of interfacial motion of liquids, evaluation methodologies, and manipulation strategies in design is presented for modern tribo-systems exposed to thermal gradients and establish general guidelines for the design of miniature rolling bearings, microfluidics, and condensation and heat transfer devices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermocapillary effects during the melting of phase change materials in microgravity: Heat transport enhancement

TL;DR: In this article, an extensive numerical investigation of the heat transport enhancement achieved by the thermocapillary effect during the melting of phase change materials in microgravity is presented, where the phase change transition is analyzed for the high Prandtl number paraffin n-octadecane in a two-dimensional rectangular container subjected to isothermal conditions along the lateral boundaries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermocapillary effects during the melting in microgravity of phase change materials with a liquid bridge geometry

TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed numerical investigation of phase change materials (PCMs) in microgravity is presented, where the authors consider the high Prandtl number alkane n-octadecane and quantify the effect of thermocapillary convection on the heat transfer observed during axisymmetric melting with a liquid bridge geometry.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Engineering flows in small devices

TL;DR: An overview of flows in microdevices with focus on electrokinetics, mixing and dispersion, and multiphase flows is provided, highlighting topics important for the description of the fluid dynamics: driving forces, geometry, and the chemical characteristics of surfaces.
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Long-scale evolution of thin liquid films

TL;DR: In this article, a unified mathematical theory is presented that takes advantage of the disparity of the length scales and is based on the asymptotic procedure of reduction of the full set of governing equations and boundary conditions to a simplified, highly nonlinear, evolution equation or to a set of equations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wetting and Spreading

TL;DR: In this article, the surface forces that lead to wetting are considered, and the equilibrium surface coverage of a substrate in contact with a drop of liquid is examined, while the hydrodynamics of both wetting and dewetting is influenced by the presence of the three-phase contact line separating "wet" regions from those that are either dry or covered by a microscopic film.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamics and stability of thin liquid films

TL;DR: The dynamics and stability of thin liquid films have fascinated scientists over many decades: the observations of regular wave patterns in film flows along a windowpane or along guttering, the patterning of dewetting droplets, and the fingering of viscous flows down a slope are all examples that are familiar in daily life.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Principle of Corresponding States

TL;DR: The principle of corresponding states in modern form has been applied to the following properties: the critical state, the virial coefficient, the Boyle point, the densities of coexistent phases, the vapor pressure of the liquid, the entropies of evaporation and of fusion, the coefficient of thermal expansion of liquid and the triple point temperature and pressure, the heat capacity of liquid, and the surface tension of liquid as mentioned in this paper.
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