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Drop condensation and evaportation as a result of the gradient in vapor concentration are important in both engineering and natural systems. One of the interesting natural examples is transpiration on plant leaves. Most of water in the inner space of the leaves escapes through stomata, whose rate depends on the surface topography and a difference in vapor concentrations inside and just outside of the leaves. Previous research on the vapor flux on various surfaces has focused on numerically solving the vapor diffusion equation or using scaling arguments based on a simple solution with a flat surface. In this present work, we present and discuss simple analytical solutions on various 2D surface shapes (e.g., semicylinder, semi-ellipse, hair). The method of solving the diffusion equation is to use the complex potential theory, which provides analytical solutions for vapor concentration and flux. We find that a high mass flux of vapor is formed near the top of the microstructures while a low mass flux is developed near the stomata at the leaf surface. Such a low vapor flux near the stomata may affect transpiration in two ways. First, condensed droplets on the stomata will not grow due to a low mass flux of vapor, which will not inhibit the gas exchange through the stomatal opening. Second, the low mass flux from the atmosphere will facilitate the release of high concentrated vapor from the substomatal space.
Water vapor condensation is common in nature and widely used in industrial applications, including water harvesting, power generation, and desalination. As compared to traditional filmwise condensation, dropwise condensation on lubricant-infused surf
Gaseous thermal transpiration flows through a rectangular micro-channel are simulated by the direct simulation BGK (DSBGK) method. These flows are rarefied, within the slip and transitional flow regimes, which are beyond many traditional computationa
Transport phenomena involving condensate liquids generated from the phase change heat transfer in microchannels and in engineered superhydrophobic surfaces require consideration of slip effects. In this study, the laminar film condensation over upwar
Lubricant-infused surfaces (LISs) can promote stable dropwise condensation and improve heat transfer rates due to a low nucleation free-energy barrier and high droplet mobility. Topographical differences in the oil surface cause water microdroplets t
We numerically investigate the effect of non-condensable gas inside a vapor bubble on bubble dynamics, collapse pressure and pressure impact of spherical and aspherical bubble collapses. Free gas inside a vapor bubble has a damping effect that can we