Critical effects and scaling at meniscus osculation transitions
A. O. Parry, Martin Posp\'i\v{s}il, and A. Malijevsk\'y

TL;DR
This paper develops a scaling theory for critical effects at meniscus osculation transitions, identifying regimes based on fluctuation dominance and mean-field behavior, and confirms predictions through models and numerical studies.
Contribution
It introduces a new mean-field regime for meniscus osculation transitions and explicitly determines the upper critical dimension depending on intermolecular forces.
Findings
In 2D, the exponent is predicted as 3/7 for short-ranged forces.
Numerical DFT results in 3D show an exponent close to 1/3, confirming the mean-field prediction.
The theory distinguishes fluctuation-dominated and mean-field regimes based on force range and dimension.
Abstract
We propose a simple scaling theory describing critical effects at rounded meniscus osculation transitions which occur when the Laplace radius of a condensed macroscopic drop of liquid coincides with the local radius of curvature in a confining parabolic geometry. We argue that the exponent characterising the scale of the interfacial height at osculation, for large , falls into two regimes representing fluctuation-dominated and mean-field like behaviour, respectively. These two regimes are separated by an upper critical dimension, which is determined here explicitly and which depends on the range of the intermolecular forces. In the fluctuation-dominated regime, representing the universality class of systems with short-ranged forces, the exponent is related to the value of the interfacial wandering exponent by…
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