APS Logo

Impact of droplets on surfactant-laden thin liquid films

ORAL

Abstract

The occurrence of drop impacts on liquid surfaces has been observed in a broad range of natural phenomena and industrial applications. Most of those streams may be contaminated with surfactants (i.e., surface-active agents), whose concentration variations lead to surface tension gradients, which in turn, results in the formation of Marangoni stresses. We study the effect of insoluble surfactants on the impact of droplets on surfactant-laden thin liquid films via a fully three-dimensional direct numerical simulations, and taking into account surfactant-ind­uced Marangoni stresses due to gradients in interfacial surfactant concentration. We focus on the "crown-splash regime", and we observe that the crown dynamics go through various stages: from the growth of linear modes (through a Rayleigh-Plateau instability) to the development of nonlinearities leading to primary and secondary breakup events (through droplet shedding modulated by an end-pinching mechanism). We show that the addition of surfactants does not affect the wave selection via the Rayleigh-Plateau instability. However, the presence of surfactants affects the late stages of the dynamics as soon as the ligaments are driven from the rim. Surfactant-induced Marangoni stresses retard the end-pinching mechanisms to result in longer ligaments prior to their capillary singularity, and promote the spanwise merging between ligaments. Additionally, we have studied the limiting ca­se of three-dimensional rim-driven retraction dynamics of thin water sheets in air.

Presenters

  • Ricardo Constante

    University of Wisconsin, Imperial College London

Authors

  • Ricardo Constante

    University of Wisconsin, Imperial College London

  • Lyes Kahouadji

    Imperial College London

  • Seungwon Shin

    Department of Mechanical and System Design Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, Republic of Korea, Hongik University, South Korea

  • Jalel Chergui

    Université Paris Saclay, CNRS, LISN, France

  • Damir Juric

    Université Paris Saclay, CNRS, LISN, France; DAMTP, Cambridge, Université Paris Saclay, CNRS, LISN, France; DAMTP, France

  • Alfonso A Castrejon-Pita

    Oxfod University, Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, University of Oxford

  • Jose Rafael Castrejon-Pita

    Queen Mary Univ London, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University College London, University College London

  • Omar K Matar

    Imperial College London, Imperial College London, The Alan Turing Institute