Films, layers and droplets: The effect of near-wall fluid structure on spreading dynamics

Yin H, Sibley D, Thiele U, Archer A

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

We present a study of the spreading of liquid droplets on a solid substrate at very small scales. We focus on the regime where effective wetting energy (binding potential) and surface tension effects significantly influence steady and spreading droplets. In particular, we focus on strong packing and layering effects in the liquid near the substrate due to underlying density oscillations in the fluid caused by attractive substrate-liquid interactions. We show that such phenomena can be described by a thin-film (or long-wave or lubrication) model including an oscillatory Derjaguin (or disjoining or conjoining) pressure and explore the effects it has on steady droplet shapes and the spreading dynamics of droplets on both an adsorption (or precursor) layer and completely dry substrates. At the molecular scale, commonly used two-term binding potentials with a single preferred minimum controlling the adsorption layer height are inadequate to capture the rich behavior caused by the near-wall layered molecular packing. The adsorption layer is often submonolayer in thickness, i.e., the dynamics along the layer consists of single-particle hopping, leading to a diffusive dynamics, rather than the collective hydrodynamic motion implicit in standard thin-film models. We therefore modify the model in such a way that for thicker films the standard hydrodynamic theory is realized, but for very thin layers a diffusion equation is recovered.

Details about the publication

Volume95
StatusPublished
Release year2017
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1103/PhysRevE.95.023104

Authors from the University of Münster

Thiele, Uwe
Professur für Theoretische Physik (Prof. Thiele)
Center for Data Science and Complexity (CDSC)
Center for Multiscale Theory and Computation (CMTC)

Projects the publication originates from

Duration: since 31/12/2013
Type of project: Own resources project