Unmasking of Novel Conic Modes in Electrically Stressed Perfectly Conducting Liquids
Chengzhe Zhou, Sandra M. Troian

TL;DR
This paper uncovers new self-similar conic modes in electrically stressed liquid metals, explaining complex tip behaviors and phenomena observed in liquid metal ion sources through advanced modeling and simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a family of novel self-similar conic modes incorporating inertial, electrical, and capillary effects, explaining previously unexplained tip dynamics in liquid metal ion sources.
Findings
Discovery of new self-similar conic modes with dynamic features
Explanation of tip oscillation, pulsation, and breakup phenomena
Enhanced understanding of liquid tip shapes in ion source applications
Abstract
Liquid metal ion sources (LMIS) are widely used in applications ranging from local ion implantation in semiconductors, to focused ion beam systems for milling and nanolithography, to space micropropulsion devices being developed by NASA. Above a critically large field strength, an electrically stressed liquid metal develops one or more cuspidal protrusions which undergo accelerated conic tip sharpening with runaway field self-enhancement. Zubarev (2001) first predicted from an inviscid model that the electric stresses at the liquid apex undergo self-similar divergent growth in finite time. The inviscid assumption is appropriate to liquid metals since the viscous boundary layer extends only a few tens of nanometers from the moving interface. In this work, we examine in more depth a two-parameter family of far-field self-similar solutions incorporating inertial, electrical and capillary…
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