Viscous dissipation dictates Taylor-Culick type retractions
ORAL
Abstract
Surface tension minimizes the surface area of a ruptured liquid film resulting in a spontaneous retraction. For a long film surrounded by passive gaseous medium (like air), the retraction speed is known to approach a constant Taylor-Culick velocity (given by vTC = (2γ/(ρh0))0.5 for a sheet of thickness, h0, density ρ, and surface tension coefficient γ). This velocity is independent of the viscosity of both the film as well as the surrounding. In the present work, we study similar retraction dynamics of a liquid film (i) surrounded by a viscous medium (oil) and (ii) sandwiched between a passive (air) and a viscous media (oil). We show that the film in these configurations still retracts with a constant velocity that scales linearly with vTC. However, the prefactor depends on the viscosity of the oil bath, ηs. The dependence is stronger in case of first configuration (i, v ∽ 1/ηs) as compared to the second (ii, v ∽ 1/ηs0.5). This difference arises due to the localization of the viscous dissipation near the three-phase contact line in the second configuration. We look at the overall energy budgets to provide insights into the dynamics of this process.
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Publication: V. Sanjay, U. Sen, P. Kant, and D. Lohse. Taylor-Culick retraction at interfaces. (In preparation)
Presenters
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Vatsal Sanjay
Univ of Twente
Authors
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Vatsal Sanjay
Univ of Twente
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Uddalok Sen
Univ of Twente
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Pallav Kant
University of Twente, Univ of Twente
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Detlef Lohse
Univ of Twente, University of Twente, Max Planck Center Twente for Complex Fluid Dynamics and J.M. Burgers Centre for Fluid Mechanics, University of Twente