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Liquid droplet impact on a sonically excited thin membrane.

Abba Abdulhamid AbubakarBekir Sami YilbasHussain Al-QahtaniAmmar Alzaydi
Published in: Soft matter (2022)
The characteristics of droplet impact on hydrophobic surfaces can be altered by introducing surface oscillations. The contact duration, spreading, retraction, and rebounding behaviors of the impacting water droplet are examined at various sonic excitation frequencies of the hydrophobic membrane. Membrane oscillation and droplet behavior are analyzed by utilizing a high-speed camera. The restitution coefficient and membrane dynamics are formulated and the findings are compared with those of the experiments. It is found that the mode of membrane oscillation changes as the sonic excitation frequency is changed. The droplet spreading and retraction rates reduce while the rebound height and restitution coefficient increase at a sonic excitation frequency of 75 Hz. However, further increase of the excitation frequency results in reduced rebound height because of the increased energy dissipation on the impacted surface. The droplet contact (transition time) duration reduces as the excitation frequency increases. Increasing droplet Weber number enhances the droplet contact period on the membrane, which becomes more apparent at low frequencies of sonic excitation.
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