Contact Line Dynamics
ORAL
Abstract
The conventional no-slip boundary condition leads to a non-integrable stress singularity at a moving contact line. This makes numerical simulations of two-phase flow challenging, especially when capillarity of the contact point is essential for the dynamics of the flow. We will describe a modeling methodology, which is suitable for numerical simulations, and present results from numerical computations. The methodology is based on combining a relation between the apparent contact angle and the contact line velocity, with the similarity solution for Stokes flow at a planar interface. The relation between angle and velocity can be determined by theoretical arguments, or from simulations using a more detailed model. In our approach we have used results from phase field simulations in a small domain, but using a molecular dynamics model should also be possible. In both cases more physics is included and the stress singularity is removed.
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Authors
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Gunilla Kreiss
Uppsala Univ
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Hanna Holmgren
Uppsala Univ
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Martin Kronbichler
TU Munich
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Anthony Ge
KTH Stockholm
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Luca Brandt
KTH Mechanics, KTH Stockholm, Linne FLOW Centre, KTH Mechanics, Stockholm, Sweden, KTH Mechanics, Stockholm, Sweden, KTH Royal Institute of Technology