Deformation modes of an oil-water interface under a local electric field: From Taylor cones to surface dimples
Sebastian Dehe, Steffen Hardt

TL;DR
This study explores complex deformation modes of oil-water interfaces under local electric fields, revealing how charged droplets influence phenomena like Taylor cones and surface dimples through combined experimental and numerical analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive experimental and numerical approach to understand the role of charged droplets in complex interface deformation modes under electric fields.
Findings
Droplets trigger dimple formation at the interface.
Electric current and optical measurements elucidate deformation mechanisms.
Numerical models accurately reproduce experimental interface behaviors.
Abstract
Fluidic interfaces disintegrate under sufficiently strong electric fields, leading to electrohydrodynamic (EHD) tip streaming. Taylor cones, which emit charged droplets from the tip of a conical cusp, are among the most prominent and well-studied examples of EHD instabilities. In liquid-liquid systems, more complex interface deformation modes than simple Taylor cones can be observed, with the interface being pushed away from the electrode, and additional cone structures emerging from the rim of the dimple. In this article, we investigate the mechanisms behind these deformation modes experimentally and numerically, and demonstrate that the presence of droplets triggers the dimple at the interface. In order to characterize the underlying processes, we replace the pin electrode by a hollow metallic needle with a prescribed electrolyte volume flow. The submerged electrospray introduces…
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