From Electrodiffusion Theory to the Electrohydrodynamics of Leaky Dielectrics through the Weak Electrolyte Limit
Yoichiro Mori, Yuan-Nan Young

TL;DR
This paper derives the classical Taylor-Melcher model for leaky dielectrics from a more fundamental electrodiffusion framework, explicitly modeling ion dissociation and interfacial effects, and reveals conditions for the emergence of the Galvani potential and droplet motion.
Contribution
It provides a mathematical derivation of the TM model from electrodiffusion equations with weak salt dissociation, linking ion dynamics to electrohydrodynamics of leaky dielectrics.
Findings
Derivation of TM model from electrodiffusion with weak salt dissociation
Identification of the Galvani potential as a natural interfacial voltage jump
Prediction of droplet drift velocity under electric fields
Abstract
The Taylor-Melcher (TM) model is the standard model for describing the dynamics of poorly conducting leaky dielectric fluids under an electric field. The TM model treats the fluids as Ohmic conductors, without modeling the underlying ion dynamics. On the other hand, electrodiffusion models, which have been successful in describing electrokinetic phenomena, incorporate ionic concentration dynamics. Mathematical reconciliation of the electrodiffusion picture and the TM model has been a major issue for electrohydrodynamic theory. Here, we derive the TM model from an electrodiffusion model in which we explicitly model the electrochemistry of ion dissociation. We introduce salt dissociation reaction terms in the bulk electrodiffusion equations and take the limit in which the salt dissociation is weak; the assumption of weak dissociation corresponds to the fact that the TM model describes…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsMembrane-based Ion Separation Techniques · Electrokinetic Soil Remediation Techniques · Electrostatics and Colloid Interactions
