Wetting on a spherical wall: influence of liquid-gas interfacial properties
Andreas Nold, Alexandr Malijevsk\'y, Serafim Kalliadasis

TL;DR
This study investigates how liquid films wet spherical surfaces, emphasizing the role of liquid-gas interfacial properties and comparing theoretical models with density functional theory to improve predictive accuracy.
Contribution
It extends the soft-interface approximation to curved substrates and demonstrates the importance of liquid-gas surface tension in wetting behavior on spherical walls.
Findings
SKA agrees well with DFT in the planar limit
Quantitative discrepancies are due to overestimated surface tension in SKA
Relaxing sharp interface assumption improves model accuracy
Abstract
We study the equilibrium of a liquid film on an attractive spherical substrate for an intermolecular interaction model exhibiting both fluid-fluid and fluid-wall long-range forces. We first reexamine the wetting properties of the model in the zero-curvature limit, i.e., for a planar wall, using an effective interfacial Hamiltonian approach in the framework of the well known sharp-kink approximation (SKA). We obtain very good agreement with a mean-field density functional theory (DFT), fully justifying the use of SKA in this limit. We then turn our attention to substrates of finite curvature and appropriately modify the so-called soft-interface approximation (SIA) originally formulated by Napi\'orkowski and Dietrich [Phys. Rev. B 34, 6469 (1986)] for critical wetting on a planar wall. A detailed asymptotic analysis of SIA confirms the SKA functional form for the film growth. However, it…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
