Bulletin of the American Physical Society
77th Annual Meeting of the Division of Fluid Dynamics
Sunday–Tuesday, November 24–26, 2024; Salt Lake City, Utah
Session X06: Drops: Electric Field Effects
8:00 AM–10:36 AM,
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
Room: Ballroom F
Chair: Yang Liu, City College of New York
Abstract: X06.00006 : On the mechanism of jet splitting in electrospinning*
9:05 AM–9:18 AM
Presenter:
Krishna Raja Dharmarajan
(King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST))
Authors:
Krishna Raja Dharmarajan
(King Abdullah Univ of Sci & Tech (KAUST))
Muhammad Faheem Afzaal
(King Abdullah University of Science and Technology)
Yuan Si Tian
(Department of Modern Mechanics, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230027, China)
Er Qiang Li
(Department of Modern Mechanics, University of Science and Technology of China , Hefei 230027, China)
Sigurdur T Thoroddsen
(King Abdullah University of Science and Technology)
Electrospinning from drops containing polymers is widely used to produce fibers of different morphologies with various applications in tissue engineering, filtration, energy, biotechnology and sensors, and efforts have been made to understand the associated instabilities. The fiber diameter can be reduced to an extent with solution properties and primarily through jet instabilities like branching whipping and jet splitting. We unravel the dynamics of jet splitting in electrospinning using ultra-high-speed stereo imaging. Experiments were conducted over a wide range of molecular weights of the PEO polymer. Taylor jets start for an electric field above 2800 V/cm, while above 3500 V/cm, the jet flattens, and sideways branching occurs. But branching only occurs when the collector is significantly wider than the nozzle. In a particular range of molecular weights, holes nucleate at the base of the branch. These holes rapidly expand and split into two subfilaments. The same splitting mechanism occurs for the tertiary jets to reduce the fiber diameter by an order of magnitude. For the largest molecular weight polymer solutions, we observe ‘fractal-type branching’.
*This work was funded by King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) under grant number BAS/1/1352-01-01.
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