From Condensation Frosting to Anti-Frosting
ORAL
Abstract
Condensation frosting, where supercooled dew nucleates on a surface and subsequently freezes into ice, is how the foundational layer of frost forms on chilled surfaces. For perfectly wetting surfaces, the supercooled condensate simply forms as a continuous film that freezes over all at once. But for non-wetting surfaces, condensation frosting manifests itself as inter-droplet ice bridges that connect frozen droplets to neighboring liquid droplets in a chain reaction. First, we present scaling laws that rationalize the dynamics of the inter-droplet ice bridging events. Second, a universal scaling law is developed to capture the extent of a dry zone that stabilizes about the perimeter of an isolated frozen droplet in the absence of ice bridging. Finally, a scaling law and numerical model are used to optimize a passive anti-frosting surface comprised of a dilute array of ice stripes promoting overlapping dry zones.
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Presenters
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Jonathan Boreyko
Virginia Tech
Authors
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Jonathan Boreyko
Virginia Tech
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Farzad Ahmadi
Virginia Tech
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Saurabh Nath
Virginia Tech
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Caitlin Bisbano
Virginia Tech
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Grady Iliff
Virginia Tech
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Pengtao Yue
Virginia Tech, Virginia Polytechnic Institute