Curvature driven propulsion of floating films: Part 1
ORAL
Abstract
Small floating objects often clump together, due to the long-range capillary interactions between their boundary menisci. Previous studies of the “Cheerios effect” [1] have focused on rigid solids, but much less is known about analogous behaviors for floating objects that are easily deformed by surface tension. Here the behaviors may be much more subtle, and can be strongly influenced by geometric incompatibilities between the solid and the fluid. We focus on a model system where a thin polymer film (~100 nm) is confined to the curved water interface of an overfilled petri dish. We measure the trajectories of planar films and curved shells released from various starting positions. By altering the geometry and thickness of the films and the viscosity of the fluid, we build an empirical description of this system, in regimes where the drag is primarily inertial or viscous. In all cases, the spontaneous translation is directed towards a region where the curvature of the meniscus is similar to the rest curvature of the film. In the following talk, we describe simulations that we use to measure the system energy. (This is part 1 of a 2-talk series.)
[1] Vella & Mahadevan, Am. J. Phys. 73, 814 (2005).
Support from NSF-DMR-CAREER-1654102 is gratefully acknowledged.
[1] Vella & Mahadevan, Am. J. Phys. 73, 814 (2005).
Support from NSF-DMR-CAREER-1654102 is gratefully acknowledged.
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Presenters
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Monica M Ripp
Syracuse University
Authors
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Monica M Ripp
Syracuse University
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Raj De
Syracuse University
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Seif Hejazine
Syracuse University
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Joseph D Paulsen
Syracuse University