ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The levitation of a volatile droplet on a highly superheated surface is known as the Leidenfrost effect. Wetting state during transition from full wetting of a surface by a droplet at room temperature to Leidenfrost bouncing, i.e., zero-wetting at high superheating, is not fully understood. Here, visualizations of droplet thermal and wetting footprint in the Leidenfrost transition state are presented using two optical techniques: mid-infrared thermography and wetting sensitive total internal reflection imaging under carefully selected experimental conditions, impact Weber number < 10 and droplet diameter < capillary length, using an indium-tin-oxide coated sapphire heater. The experimental regime was designed to create relatively stable droplet dynamics, where the effects of oscillatory and capillary instabilities were minimized. The thermography for ethanol droplet in Leidenfrost transition state (superheat range of 82K-97K) revealed thermal footprint with a central hot zone surrounded by a cooler periphery, indicative of a partial wetting state during Leidenfrost transition. High-speed total internal reflection imaging also confirmed the partial wetting footprint such that there are wetting areas around a central non-wetting zone. Result presented here using ethanol as a test fluid shed light on the geometry and dynamics of a volatile droplet footprint in Leidenfrost transition state.
Volatile drops deposited on a hot solid can levitate on a cushion of their own vapor, without contacting the surface. We propose to understand the onset of this so-called Leidenfrost effect through an analogy to non-equilibrium systems exhibiting a d
Modification and control over the vaporization kinetics of microfluidic droplets may have strong utilitarian implications in several scientific and technological applications. The article reports the control over the vaporization kinetics of pendent
Droplet migration in a Hele--Shaw cell is a fundamental multiphase flow problem which is crucial for many microfluidics applications. We focus on the regime at low capillary number and three-dimensional direct numerical simulations are performed to i
To understand the behavior of composite fluid particles such as nucleated cells and double-emulsions in flow, we study a finite-size particle encapsulated in a deforming droplet under shear flow as a model system. In addition to its concentric partic
A liquid droplet, immersed into a Newtonian fluid, can be propelled solely by internal flow. In a simple model, this flow is generated by a collection of point forces, which represent externally actuated devices or model autonomous swimmers. We work