Quantitative coarse graining of laminar fluid flow penetration in rough boundaries
Akankshya Majhi, Lars Kool, Jasper van der Gucht, Joshua A. Dijksman

TL;DR
This paper introduces a universal method to quantify fluid penetration into rough boundaries using coarse graining, supported by experiments and simulations, revealing that surface patterning can control wall slip.
Contribution
It presents a new coarse grained approach to determine a universal penetration depth for rough walls, simplifying boundary condition modeling.
Findings
A universal penetration depth function for roughness patterns.
Wall roughness boundary conditions can be represented by an average slip length.
Surface patterning allows control over wall slip behavior.
Abstract
The interaction between a fluid and a wall is described with a certain boundary condition for the fluid velocity at the wall. To understand how fluids behave near a rough wall, the fluid velocity at every point of the rough surface may be provided. This approach requires detailed knowledge of, and likely depends strongly on the roughness. Another approach of modeling the boundary conditions of a rough wall is to coarse grain and extract a penetration depth over which on average the fluid penetrates into the roughness. In this work we show that for a broad range of periodic roughness patterns and relative flow velocities, a universal penetration depth function can be obtained. We obtain these results with experiments and complementary numerical simulations. Our results show that wall roughness boundary conditions can be captured with an average ``slip length'' and so indicate that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Thin Films · Lattice Boltzmann Simulation Studies · Surface Modification and Superhydrophobicity
