Investigation of coalescence and pinch-off processes of a self-rewetting drop interacting with a liquid layer
Bashir Elbousefi, William Schupbach, Kannan N. Premnath, Samuel W.J. Welch

TL;DR
This study investigates the coalescence and pinch-off behavior of self-rewetting fluids interacting with a liquid layer under nonuniform heating, revealing earlier pinch-off and the influence of thermocapillary forces compared to normal fluids.
Contribution
It introduces a phase-field lattice Boltzmann model to analyze the unique thermocapillary effects of self-rewetting fluids on drop dynamics under nonuniform heating.
Findings
Self-rewetting fluids undergo earlier pinch-off than normal fluids.
Increasing Ohnesorge number suppresses pinch-off, highlighting viscous effects.
Thermocapillary forces significantly influence coalescence and pinch-off behavior.
Abstract
Self-rewetting fluids (SRFs), such as long-chain aqueous alcohols, are a special class of liquids with surface tension that is anomalously dependent quadratically on temperature, resulting in thermocapillary flows that differ significantly from those in normal fluids (NFs). This study focuses on investigating the behavior of SRF drops interacting with a liquid layer under nonuniform heating conditions. In this regard, we employ a robust central moment-based lattice Boltzmann method with a phase-field model expressed in an axisymmetric formulation to capture three-dimensional effects efficiently. We investigate the coalescence and pinch-off processes in SRFs and compare them to those in NFs. Our simulations reveal that SRFs undergo pinch-off earlier than NFs. We also observe that increasing the Ohnesorge number Oh suppresses the pinch-off process, highlighting the relative role of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer · Surface Modification and Superhydrophobicity · Nanomaterials and Printing Technologies
