Bulletin of the American Physical Society
75th Annual Meeting of the Division of Fluid Dynamics
Volume 67, Number 19
Sunday–Tuesday, November 20–22, 2022; Indiana Convention Center, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Session Z12: Drops: Instability and Break-up II
12:50 PM–3:00 PM,
Tuesday, November 22, 2022
Room: 139
Chair: Pierre-Thomas Brun, Princeton University
Abstract: Z12.00004 : Surface explosions when oil, water, and alcohol mix!
1:29 PM–1:42 PM
Author not Attending
Presenter:
Dilip K Maity
(King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST))
Authors:
Dilip K Maity
(King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST))
Sandip L Dighe
(King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST))
Amit Katoch
(King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST))
Tadd Truscott
(King Abdullah University of Science and Technology)
When an immiscible oil is deposited over soapy water, a liquid lens is formed. Subsequently, when a smaller droplet of ethanol-water mixture is deposited on the oil lens, rupture occurs within a few minutes. This rupture time is found to depend on the shape and size of the liquid lens and the concentration of the ethanol-water mixture. The rupture can be attributed to the moment when the ethanol-water mixture comes in contact with the miscible soapy water solution. Spontaneous emulsification and the density-difference (Rayleigh-Taylor instability) phenomenon influence the ethanol-water descent. Rupture is characterized by a large radial but thin circular film rapidly expanding (<2 ms) to a radius often larger than the original oil lens. The phenomenon continues as the radius then retracts towards the center and the now non-uniform ethanol-water mixture forms a fingering instability (< 4 ms), finally retracting to near-zero radii. Data from high-speed imaging predicts a power law correlation for this thin film spreading behavior.
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