2005 58th Annual Meeting of the Division of Fluid Dynamics
Sunday–Tuesday, November 20–22, 2005;
Chicago, IL
Session FV: Minisymposium: Polymeric Fluids in Simple Shear: From Interfacial Slip to Constitutive Discontinuity
8:00 AM–10:10 AM,
Monday, November 21, 2005
Hilton Chicago
Room: Marquette
Chair: Shi-Qing Wang, University of Akron
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.DFD.FV.3
Abstract: FV.00003 : Influence of Surface Conditions on the Slip Behavior at Liquid/Solid Interfaces: Comparison Between Molecular-Based Models and Continuum Predictions
8:52 AM–9:18 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Sandra Troian
(Princeton University)
Advanced design of micro- and nanofluidic devices requires better
understanding of the surface conditions affecting small scale
transport. The smaller the device, the more critical are the
boundary conditions and resulting frictional losses in degrading
performance. Viscous drag can be reduced by enhancing slip at
liquid/solid (L/S) interfaces. Recent experiments indicate
measureable slip in flow against silanized and topologically
textured substrates and in systems conducive to nanobubble
nucleation at the L/S interface. Entangled polymer melts tend to
generate even larger slip lengths, defined as the extrapolated
distance within the solid phase where the tangential flow speed
vanishes. While hydrodynamic analyses are useful in providing a
continuum description of fluidic response, molecular dynamics
(MD) simulations offer detailed resolution of the molecular
behavior near chemically or topologically modified surfaces.
In this talk we will focus on the slip length of simple and
polymeric liquids subject to planar shear at vanishing Reynolds
number and investigate the influence of chain length, surface
roughness, chemical patterning and shear rate. Direct comparison
between hydrodynamic predictions, molecular dynamics (MD)
simulations and a molecular based friction model reveals the
geometric and molecular parameters influencing slip at different
length scales. Excellent agreement between continuum and MD
simulations is obtained when the substrate feature size is about
an order of magnitude larger than the fluid diameter. Below this
limit, we describe how the substrate features cause either an
enhancement or reduction in the continuum estimate. For
molecular-scale features, a Green-Kubo analysis of the friction
coefficient successfully reproduces the MD results for periodic
surface roughness. In combination, these continuum and
molecular-scale investigations provide a detailed picture of slip
spanning multiple length scales. (This work, performed in
collaboration with N. V. Priezjev and A. A. Darhuber, is funded
by the NSF, the NASA Microgravity Fluid Physics Program and the
Princeton Institute for the Science and Technology of Materials.)
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.DFD.FV.3