Bulletin of the American Physical Society
74th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics
Volume 66, Number 17
Sunday–Tuesday, November 21–23, 2021; Phoenix Convention Center, Phoenix, Arizona
Session P27: Particle-laden Flows: General & Suspensions: Instability and Confined Flows
4:05 PM–6:41 PM,
Monday, November 22, 2021
Room: North 227 ABC
Chair: Xiaoyu Tang, Northeastern University
Abstract: P27.00003 : Going with the Flow: Colloidal Dynamics at Moving Immiscible Fluid Interfaces
4:31 PM–4:44 PM
Presenter:
Joanna Schneider
(Princeton University)
Authors:
Joanna Schneider
(Princeton University)
Rodney Priestley
(Princeton University)
Sujit S Datta
(Princeton University)
As the immiscible fluid interface passes over particles, we observe that they strongly adsorb to it, despite their lack of surface activity under quiescent conditions. We show that this surprising behavior arises due to the influence of capillary forces exerted by the fluid interface as it impinges on the particles, forcing them to overcome the electrostatic energy barrier to adsorption. Thus, the surface coverage of the interface by particles increases with time as the fluid droplet traverses the channel. Eventually, the interface becomes saturated with adsorbed particles—triggering an abrupt fluid-solid transition in its rheology that alters subsequent flow. As a consequence, the interface has a finite “carrying capacity”, continually sloughing off particles when it is sufficiently jammed. While injection of immiscible fluid interfaces has been explored for its potential to remove deposited particles from solid surfaces, our study reveals the limitation that fluid interfaces can rapidly become saturated by particles. Our results show that this limitation can be overcome by increasing fluid interfacial area, suggesting a new approach to anti-fouling using dispersed droplets.
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