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The effect of viscoelasticity on sprays produced from agricultural flat fan nozzles is investigated experimentally using dilute aqueous solutions of polyethylene oxide (PEO). Measurements of the droplet size distribution using laser diffraction reveal that polymer addition to water results in the formation of overall bigger droplets with a broader size distribution. The median droplet size $D_{50}$ is found to increase linearly with the extensional relaxation time of the liquid. The non-dimensional median droplet sizes of different polymer solutions, sprayed at different operating pressures from nozzles of different sizes, rescale on a single master curve when plotted against an empirical function of the Weber and Deborah numbers. Using high-speed photography of the spraying process, we show that the increase in droplet size with viscoelasticity can be partly attributed to an increase of the wavelength of the flapping motion responsible for the sheet breakup. We also show that droplet size distributions, rescaled by the average drop size, are well described by a compound gamma distribution with parameters $n$ and $m$ encoding for the ligament corrugation and the width of the ligament size distribution, respectively. These parameters are found to saturate to values $n=4$ and $m=4$ at high polymer concentrations.
Understanding the mechanics of detrimental convective instabilities in drying polymer solutions is crucial in many applications such as the production of film coatings. It is well known that solvent evaporation in polymer solutions can lead to Raylei
The impact of liquid drops on solid surfaces is ubiquitous in nature, and of practical importance in many industrial processes. A drop hitting a flat surface retains a circular symmetry throughout the impact process. Here we show that a drop impingin
Liquid drops and vibrations are ubiquitous in both everyday life and technology, and their combination can often result in fascinating physical phenomena opening up intriguing opportunities for practical applications in biology, medicine, chemistry a
Drop impact causes severe surface erosion, dictating many important natural, environmental and engineering processes and calling for tremendous prevention and preservation efforts. Nevertheless, despite extensive studies on various kinematic features
A charged droplet can be electrodynamically levitated in the air using a quadrupole trap by typically applying a sinusoidal electric field. When a charged drop is levitated it exhibits surface oscillations simultaneously building charge density due t