Tuesday, July 10, 2012

1207.1998 (David N. Sibley et al.)

Slip or not slip? A methodical examination of the interface formation
model using two-dimensional droplet spreading on a horizontal planar
substrate as a prototype system
   [PDF]

David N. Sibley, Nikos Savva, Serafim Kalliadasis
We consider the spreading of a thin two-dimensional droplet on a planar substrate as a prototype system to compare the contemporary model for contact line motion based on interface formation of Shikhmurzaev [Int. J. Multiphas. Flow 19, 589 (1993)], to the more commonly used continuum fluid dynamical equations augmented with the Navier-slip condition. Considering quasistatic droplet evolution and using the method of matched asymptotics, we find that the evolution of the droplet radius using the interface formation model reduces to an equivalent expression for a slip model, where the prescribed microscopic dynamic contact angle has a velocity dependent correction to its static value. This result is found for both the original interface formation model formulation and for a more recent version, where mass transfer from bulk to surface layers is accounted for through the boundary conditions. Various features of the model, such as the pressure behaviour and rolling motion at the contact line, and their relevance, are also considered in the prototype system we adopt.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.1998

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