From spreading to splashing: Interfacial phenomena of an ethanol droplet impacts on ultracold surfaces

  • Song Yang
  • , Paul Anaël Pogu
  • , Yu Hou
  • , Kequan Xia
  • , Tom Reddyhoff
  • , Min Yu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Understanding droplet impact behavior under low-temperature conditions is important for a range of fluid–surface interaction scenarios. This study explores the impact dynamics of ethanol droplets on hydrophilic silicon surfaces across a range of impact heights and sub-zero surface temperatures. Increasing impact height and decreasing surface temperature were found to influence the transition from spreading to splashing, with fingering frequently appearing as an intermediate morphology. Dimensionless parameters - including the Weber, Reynolds, and Capillary numbers - were calculated using temperature-dependent fluid properties. Existing criteria describing impact regime transitions were referenced and adapted to the present experimental system. To incorporate the influence of fluid volatility and interfacial cooling, a modified correlation was proposed by combining temperature-corrected Weber and Reynolds numbers with the Péclet number. The resulting criterion reflects the observed transition trends and may serve as a practical tool for analyzing droplet impact behavior of volatile fluids under sub-zero conditions.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107620
JournalSurfaces and Interfaces
Volume73
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Sep 2025

Keywords

  • Ethanol droplet
  • Evaporation effect
  • Heat transfer
  • Hydrophilic cold surface

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