Surfactant-induced Marangoni stresses in drop-interface coalescence
ORAL
Abstract
We study the effect of surfactants on the dynamics of a drop-interface coalescence using fully-three-dimensional direct numerical simulations. We employ a hybrid interface-tracking/level-set method, which takes into account Marangoni stresses that arise from surface tension gradients, interfacial and bulk diffusion, and sorption kinetic effects. We validate our predictions against available experimental data, and perform a parametric study that demonstrates the delicate interplay between the flow fields and those associated with the surfactant bulk and interfacial concentrations. The results of this work unravel the crucial role of the Marangoni stresses in the flow physics of coalescence with particular attention paid to their influence on neck reopening dynamics in terms of stagnation-point inhibition, and near-neck vorticity generation. We demonstrate that surfactant-laden cases feature a rigidifying effect on the interface compared to the surfactant-free case, a mechanism that underpins the observed surfactant-induced phenomena.
–
Publication: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2102.08071.pdf
Presenters
-
Cristian Ricardo Constante Amores
Imperial College London
Authors
-
Cristian Ricardo Constante Amores
Imperial College London
-
Assen Batchvarov
Imperial College London
-
Lyes Kahouadji
Imperial College London
-
Seungwon Shin
Hongik University, South Korea
-
Jalel Chergui
LISN, CNRS, France
-
Damir Juric
LISN, CNRS, France
-
Omar K Matar
Imperial College London, Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ, UK