Viscoelastic effects on the deformation and breakup of a droplet on a solid wall in Couette flow

  • Ningning Wang
  • , Sheng Li
  • , Liang Shi
  • , Xuefeng Yuan
  • , Haihu Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

The deformation, movement and breakup of a wall-Attached droplet subject to Couette flow are systematically investigated using an enhanced lattice Boltzmann colour-gradient model, which accounts for not only the viscoelasticity (described by the Oldroyd-B constitutive equation) of either droplet (V/N) or matrix fluid (N/V) but also the surface wettability. We first focus on the steady-state deformation of a sliding droplet for varying values of capillary number , Weissenberg number and solvent viscosity ratio . Results show that the relative wetting area in the N/V system is increased by either increasing, or by increasing or decreasing, where the former is attributed to the increased viscous force and the latter to the enhanced elastic effects. In the V/N system, however, is restrained by the droplet elasticity, especially at higher or lower, and the inhibiting effect strengthens with an increase of. Decreasing always reduces droplet deformation when either fluid is viscoelastic. The steady-state droplet motion is quantified by the contact-line capillary number, and a force balance is established to successfully predict the variations of with for each two-phase viscosity ratio in both N/V and V/N systems. The droplet breakup is then studied for varying. The critical capillary number of droplet breakup monotonically increases with in the N/V system, while it first increases, then decreases and finally reaches a plateau in the V/N system.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberA18
JournalJournal of Fluid Mechanics
Volume963
DOIs
StatePublished - 16 May 2023

Keywords

  • contact lines
  • multiphase flow
  • viscoelasticity

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