On the effect of surfactant adsorption and viscosity change on apparent slip in hydrophobic microchannels
Christian Kunert, Jens Harting

TL;DR
This paper investigates how surfactant adsorption and viscosity influence apparent slip in hydrophobic microchannels, revealing that flow development state and surfactant presence significantly affect slip measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a novel algorithm for hydrophobic fluid-wall interactions in lattice Boltzmann simulations and explains velocity-dependent slip as a transient flow effect.
Findings
Slip length decreases with increasing viscosity.
Surfactant addition reduces slip by shielding hydrophobic wall effects.
Velocity-dependent slip observed in transient, not fully developed, flow conditions.
Abstract
Substantial experimental, theoretical, as well as numerical effort has been invested to understand the effect of boundary slippage in microfluidic devices. However, even though such devices are becoming increasingly important in scientific, medical, and industrial applications, a satisfactory understanding of the phenomenon is still lacking. This is due to the extremely precise experiments needed to study the problem and the large number of tunable parameters in such systems. In this paper we apply a recently introduced algorithm to implement hydrophobic fluid-wall interactions in the lattice Boltzmann method. We find a possible explanation for some experiments observing a slip length depending on the flow velocity which is contradictory to many theoretical results and simulations. Our explanation is that a velocity dependent slip can be detected if the flow profile is not fully…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLattice Boltzmann Simulation Studies · Aerosol Filtration and Electrostatic Precipitation · Fluid Dynamics and Vibration Analysis
