A nonlinear small-deformation theory for transient droplet electrohydrodynamics
Debasish Das, David Saintillan

TL;DR
This paper introduces a second-order small-deformation theory for droplet electrohydrodynamics that incorporates transient charge effects and nonlinear convection, aligning well with simulations and experiments.
Contribution
It develops a novel second-order theory for droplet deformation under electric fields, including transient charge relaxation and convection, extending previous models.
Findings
Excellent agreement with nonlinear simulations.
Consistent with previous models in limiting cases.
Accurate predictions in the small-deformation regime.
Abstract
The deformation of a viscous liquid droplet suspended in another liquid and subject to an applied electric field is a classic multiphase flow problem best described by the Melcher-Taylor leaky dielectric model. The main assumption of the model is that any net charge in the system is concentrated on the interface between the two liquids as a result of the jump in Ohmic currents from the bulk. Upon application of the field, the drop can either attain a steady prolate or oblate shape with toroidal circulating flows both inside and outside arising from tangential stresses on the interface due to action of the field on the surface charge distribution. Since the pioneering work of \cite{taylor1966}, there have been numerous computational and theoretical studies to predict the deformations measured in experiments. Most existing theoretical models, however, have either neglected transient…
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