Numerical simulation of the coalescence-induced polymeric droplet jumping on superhydrophobic surfaces
Kazem Bazesefidpar, Luca Brandt, Outi Tammisola

TL;DR
This study uses three-dimensional simulations to explore how viscoelastic polymeric droplets coalesce and jump on superhydrophobic surfaces, revealing the influence of elasticity and shear-thinning on droplet dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical framework combining Giesekus and phase-field models to analyze viscoelastic droplet coalescence and jumping, highlighting effects of elasticity and shear-thinning.
Findings
Elasticity alters capillary-inertial velocity scaling.
Viscoelastic droplets jump at larger Ohnesorge numbers.
Elastic stresses induce droplet jumping through chain stretching.
Abstract
Self-propelled jumping of two polymeric droplets on superhydrophobic surfaces is investigated by three-dimensional direct numerical simulations. Two identical droplets of a viscoelastic fluid slide, meet and coalesce on a surface with contact angle 180 degrees. The droplets are modelled by the Giesekus constitutive equation, introducing both viscoelasticity and a shear-thinning effects. The Cahn-Hilliard Phase-Field method is used to capture the droplet interface. The simulations capture the spontaneous coalescence and jumping of the droplets. The effect of elasticity and shear-thinning on the coalescence and jumping is investigated at capillary-inertial and viscous regimes. The results reveal that the elasticity of the droplet changes the known capillary-inertial velocity scaling of the Newtonian drops at large Ohnesorge numbers; the resulting viscoelastic droplet jumps from the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface Modification and Superhydrophobicity · Fluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer · Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions
