On nontrivial traveling waves in thin film flows including contact lines
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2572307
DOI10.1016/j.physd.2005.06.029zbMath1079.76013OpenAlexW2099381872MaRDI QIDQ2572307
Publication date: 16 November 2005
Published in: Physica D (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physd.2005.06.029
Related Items
Dynamics of a horizontal thin liquid film in the presence of reactive surfactants ⋮ The effect of evaporation on fingering instabilities ⋮ Three-dimensional coating flow of nematic liquid crystal on an inclined substrate ⋮ Asymmetric travelling waves for the thin film equation ⋮ Fingering instability of partially wetting evaporating liquids ⋮ Transient dynamics and structure of optimal excitations in thermocapillary spreading: Precursor film model
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Computing three-dimensional thin film flows including contact lines.
- Unstable spreading of a fluid filament on a vertical plane: experiments and simulations
- A Numerical and Asymptotic Study of Some Third-Order Ordinary Differential Equations Relevant to Draining and Coating Flows
- A spectral theory for fingering on a prewetted plane
- Fingering phenomena for driven coating films
- Pattern formation in the flow of thin films down an incline: Constant flux configuration
- Dewetting of ultrathin surfactant-covered films
- On a generalized approach to the linear stability of spatially nonuniform thin film flows
- Contact line instability and pattern selection in thermally driven liquid films
- The spreading of a drop by capillary action
- The moving contact line: the slip boundary condition
- On the motion of a small viscous droplet that wets a surface
- Stability of Newtonian and viscoelastic dynamic contact lines
- The rate of spreading in spin coating
- Pattern formation outside of equilibrium
- Nonlinear rivulet dynamics during unstable wetting flows
- Nonlinear long-wave stability of superposed fluids in an inclined channel
- C<scp>OATING</scp> F<scp>LOWS</scp>
- Linear stability and transient growth in driven contact lines