4.7 Article

Non-dimensional numerical study of droplet impacting on heterogeneous hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity surface

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEAT AND MASS TRANSFER
Volume 116, Issue -, Pages 951-968

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2017.09.068

Keywords

Drop dynamics; Heterogeneous surface; Interface; Hydrophilic dot; Drop breakup

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51436004, 51210011]

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Heterogeneous hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity surface involves many applications such as drop-wise condensation, but droplet dynamics on such surface is not well understood. Here, droplet impacting on heterogeneous surface was described by non-dimensional conservation equations. The volume of fluid (VOF) method tracked the gas-liquid interface. A set of parameters such as impacting velocity, drop size etc. were combined to form three key non-dimensional parameters of We, Oh and beta(i) (size ratio of hydrophilic dot to drop). Numerical simulations agreed with impacting outcomes on uniformly hydrophilic or hydrophobic surface in references. For drop dynamics on heterogeneous surface, the regime maps containing complete-drop, single-drop-pinching-off and multi-drops-pinching-off were demonstrated over a wide range of We = 1-100, Oh = 0.001-1 and beta(i) = 0.5-10. The increased beta(i) enlarges the complete drop regime. The single-drop-pinching-off mode involves combined wall adhesion and surface tension induced short wave mechanism, while the multi-drops-pinching-off mode is caused by the propagation and interference of capillary waves from both ends of an elongated liquid column. The superposition principle was found for the first time: drop patterns include an adhesion part on the wall, similar to that on a hydrophilic surface, plus a rebounding part, similar to that on a super-hydrophobic surface. Spreading diameters are increased by beta(i) at smaller We and moderate or larger beta(i), but they are not influenced by hydrophilic dot sizes at large We, under which inertia force thoroughly suppress effects of surface tension and wall adhesion. The present findings of this paper are helpful to design hydrophilic/hydrophobic surface and ensure droplet completeness during the impacting process. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. A ll rights reserved.

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