4.7 Article

Marangoni-induced deformation and rupture of a liquid film on a heated microstructured wall

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.2166642

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Thermocapillary instability is one of the primary causes of a spontaneous rupture of thin films on heated walls. The film rupture may lead to an appearance of uncontrolled dry patches that significantly deteriorate the heat and mass transfer. In the present paper the thermocapillarity-induced film flow on a microstructured wall is studied in the framework of the long-wave theory. When the wall is heated or cooled, the solution predicts a film deformation caused by thermocapillarity. The linear stability analysis shows that the films on heated microstructured walls are less stable to the long-wave disturbances compared to the films on flat walls. The time-dependent film evolution is simulated and the effect of the wall structure on the film thinning and rupture is analyzed. It is shown that the wall topography exerts a profound effect on the dynamics of the film deformation and rupture, as well as on the size and the location of the dry patches. The full-scale direct volume-of-fluid simulations are used to verity the predictions of the long-wave theory. Good agreement is found for the small ratios between the groove depth and period. The agreement is further improved by including the effect of the convection heat transfer into the long-wave model.

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