Instability and rupture of sheared viscous liquid nanofilms
ORAL
Abstract
Nanoscale liquid films resting on solid surfaces often occur in nature and in industrial processes, and can rupture due to intermolecular forces. We numerically study the evolution and rupture of viscous nanometric films, incorporating the effects of surface tension, van der waals forces, thermal fluctuations and viscous shear. We show that thermal fluctuations create perturbations that can trigger film rupture, but they do not significantly affect the growth rate of the perturbations. The film rupture time can be predicted from a linear stability analysis of the governing thin film equation, by considering the most unstable wavelength and the thermal roughness. Furthermore, applying a sufficiently large unidirectional shear can stabilise large perturbations in a two-dimensional film, but does not inhibit rupture in three-dimensional films, as perturbations are not suppressed in the direction perpendicular to the applied shear. However, if the direction of shear varies in time, the growth of large perturbations is prevented in all directions, and rupture can hence be impeded.
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Publication: Instability and rupture of sheared viscous liquid nanofilms<br>(Submitted to Physical Review Fluids)
Presenters
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Vira Dhaliwal
University of Oslo
Authors
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Vira Dhaliwal
University of Oslo
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Christian Pedersen
University of Oslo, Univ of Oslo
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Kheireddine Kadri
Laboratoire PIMM
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Guillaume Miquelard-Garnier
Laboratoire PIMM
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Cyrille Sollogoub
Laboratoire PIMM
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Jorge Peixinho
Laboratoire PIMM
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Thomas Salez
University of Bordeaux
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Andreas Carlson
University of Oslo, Univ of Oslo