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Spinning twisted ribbons: when two holes meet on a curved liquid film

ORAL

Abstract

The rupture of a liquid film, where a thin liquid layer between two other fluids breaks and forms holes, commonly occurs in both natural phenomena and industrial applications. The post-rupture dynamics, from initial hole formation to the complete collapse of the film, are crucial because they govern droplet formation, which plays a significant role in many applications such as disease transmission, aerosol formation, spray drying nanodrugs, oil spill remediation, inkjet printing and spray coating. While single-hole rupture has been extensively studied, the dynamics of multiple-hole ruptures, especially the interactions between neighbouring holes, are less well understood.

We recently found that when two holes ‘meet’ on a curved film, the film evolves into a spinning twisted ribbon before breaking into droplets, distinctly different from what occurs on flat films. We explain the formation and evolution of the spinning twisted ribbon, including its geometry, orbits, corrugations and ligaments, and compare the experimental observations with models. While our experiments are based on the multiple-hole ruptures in corona splash, the underlying principles are likely applicable to other systems.

Publication: J. H. Y. Lo, Y. Liu, T. Alghamdi, M. F. Afzaal, and S. T. Thoroddsen, Spinning twisted ribbons: when two holes meet on a curved liquid film, Journal of Fluid Mechanics 1014, A11 (2025).

Presenters

  • Jack Lo

    City University of Hong Kong

Authors

  • Jack Lo

    City University of Hong Kong

  • Yuan Liu

    King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST)

  • Tariq Alghamdi

    King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST), kaust

  • Muhammad Faheem Afzaal

    King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

  • Sigurdur T Thoroddsen

    King Abdullah University of Science and Technology