4.8 Article

Body Forces Drive the Apparent Line Tension of Sessile Droplets

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PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
卷 130, 期 6, 页码 -

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AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.064003

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This article investigates the role of line tension of a three-phase contact line in various interfacial phenomena and finds a significant discrepancy in existing measurements. The research suggests that the discrepancy is mainly caused by the failure of a commonly used estimation method to eliminate body forces, resulting in measured line tensions behaving like extensive quantities.
The line tension of a three-phase contact line is implicated in a wide variety of interfacial phenomena, but there is ongoing controversy, with existing measurements spanning six orders of magnitude in both signs. Here, we show that computationally obtained magnitudes, sign changes, and nontrivial variations of apparent line tension can be faithfully reproduced in a parsimonious model that incorporates only liquidsubstrate interactions. Our results suggest that the origin for the remarkable variation lies in the failure of a widely used estimation method to eliminate body forces, leading measured line tensions to behave like an extensive quantity.

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