Capillary and priming pressures control the penetration of yield-stress fluids through non-wetting 2D meshes
Manon Bourgade, Nicolas Bain, Lo\"ic Vanel, Mathieu Leocmach, Catherine Barentin

TL;DR
This study explores how yield-stress fluids penetrate hydrophobic meshes, revealing that penetration depends on a competition between capillary and priming pressures, with new insights into the underlying pressure dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of a priming pressure controlling yield-stress fluid penetration, a previously unreported phenomenon in forced imbibition.
Findings
Penetration is governed by capillary and priming pressures.
Priming pressure results from a local capillary instability.
Experimental evidence of priming pressure controlling flow.
Abstract
Forcing hydrophilic fluids through hydrophobic porous solids is a recurrent industrial challenge. If the penetrating fluid is Newtonian, the imposed pressure has to overcome the capillary pressure at the fluid-air interface in a pore. The presence of a yield-stress, however, makes the pressure transfer and the penetration significantly more complex. In this study, we experimentally investigate the forced penetration of a water based yield-stress fluid through a regular hydrophobic mesh under quasi-static conditions, combining quantitative pressure measurements and direct visualisation of the penetration process. We reveal that the penetration is controlled by a competition between the yield-stress and two distinct pressures. The capillary pressure, that dictates the threshold at which the yield-stress fluid penetrates the hydrophobic mesh, and a priming pressure, that controls how the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface Modification and Superhydrophobicity · Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques · Fluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer
