TL;DR
This paper investigates how contact angle hysteresis affects bendotaxis, revealing conditions under which hysteresis can trap droplets and impede their spontaneous movement in elastic channels.
Contribution
It extends a mathematical model of bendotaxis by incorporating contact angle hysteresis, predicting droplet trapping and stability conditions.
Findings
Hysteresis can prevent droplet motion in bendotaxis.
Trapped droplet configurations depend on hysteresis strength.
Criteria for droplet trapping are developed.
Abstract
Passive droplet transport mechanisms, in which continuous external energy input is not required for motion, have received significant attention in recent years. Experimental studies of such mechanisms often ignore, or use careful treatments to minimize, contact angle hysteresis, which can impede droplet motion, or even arrest it completely. Here, we consider the effect of contact angle hysteresis on bendotaxis, a mechanism in which droplets spontaneously deform an elastic channel via capillary pressure and thereby move. Here, we seek to understand when contact angle hysteresis prevents bendotaxis. We supplement a previous mathematical model of the dynamics of bendotaxis with a simple model of contact angle hysteresis, and show that this model predicts droplet trapping when hysteresis is sufficiently strong. By identifying the equilibrium configurations adopted by these trapped droplets…
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