The transition in settling velocity of surfactant-covered droplets from the Stokes to the Hadamard-Rybczynski solution
{\AA}smund Ervik, Erik Bj{\o}rklund

TL;DR
This paper introduces a continuous-interface model to explain the transition in settling velocities of surfactant-covered droplets from the Stokes to Hadamard-Rybczynski solutions, accounting for surfactant effects without advection-diffusion equations.
Contribution
The authors develop an alternative analytical model based on interfacial stresses that predicts the velocity transition and critical radius, validated against experimental data.
Findings
The model predicts the velocity transition between Stokes and Hadamard-Rybczynski regimes.
Critical radius for sphere-like fall scales with interfacial surfactant concentration.
Experimental data supports the model's prediction of velocity behavior.
Abstract
The exact solution for a small falling drop is a classical result by Hadamard and Rybczynski. But experiments show that small drops fall slower than predicted, giving closer agreement with Stokes' result for a falling hard sphere. Increasing the drop size, a transition between these two extremes is found. This is due to surfactants present in the system, and previous work has led to the stagnant-cap model. We present here an alternative approach which we call the continuous-interface model. In contrast to the stagnant-cap model, we do not consider a surfactant advection-diffusion equation at the interface. Taking instead the normal and tangential interfacial stresses into account, we solve the Stokes equation analytically for the falling drop with varying interfacial tension. Some of the solutions thus obtained, e.g. the hovering drop, violate conservation ofenergy unless energy is…
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