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Droplets Sliding down a Vertical Surface under Increasing Horizontal Forces.

Sirui TangYagnavalkya BhimavarapuSemih GulecRatul DasJie LiuHartmann N GuessanTaylor WhiteheadChun-Wei YaoRafael Tadmor
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2019)
We have investigated the retention forces of liquid drops on rotating, vertical surfaces. We considered two scenarios: in one, a horizontal, centrifugal force pushes the drop toward the surface (?pushed drop? case), and in the other, a horizontal, centrifugal force pulls the drop away from the surface (?pulled drop? case). Both drops slide down as the centrifugal force increases, although one expects that the pushed drop should remain stuck to the surface. Even more surprising, when the centrifugal force is low, the pushed drop moves faster than the pulled drop, but when the centrifugal force is high, the pushed drop moves much slower than the pulled drop. We explain these results in terms of interfacial modulus between the drop and the surface.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • climate change
  • ionic liquid
  • high resolution
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • atomic force microscopy