Effect of a surface tension gradient on the slip flow along a superhydrophobic air-water interface
Dong Song, Baowei Song, Haibao Hu, Xiaosong Du, Peng Du, Chang-Hwan, Choi, Jonathan P. Rothstein

TL;DR
This study investigates how surface tension gradients, caused by Marangoni flow, reduce slip velocity along superhydrophobic air-water interfaces, affecting drag reduction in flow systems.
Contribution
It demonstrates experimentally that surface tension gradients significantly diminish slip velocity and alter flow profiles on superhydrophobic surfaces, supported by numerical simulations.
Findings
Surface tension gradients reduce slip velocity by up to 70%.
Interface curvature influences flow reversal and slip magnitude.
Numerical models accurately predict flow alterations due to surface tension effects.
Abstract
Superhydrophobic surfaces have been shown to produce significant drag reduction in both laminar and turbulent flows by introducing an apparent slip velocity along an air-water interface trapped within the surface roughness. In the experiments presented within this study, we demonstrate the existence of a surface tension gradient associated with the resultant Marangoni flow along an air-water interface that causes the slip velocity and slip length to be significantly reduced. In this study, the slip velocity along a millimeter-sized air-water interface was investigated experimentally. This large-scale air-water interface facilitated a detailed investigation of the interfacial velocity profiles as the flow rate, interfacial curvature and interface geometry were varied. For the air-water interfaces supported above continuous grooves (concentric rings within a torsional shear flow) where no…
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