Deformation of a liquid drop adhering to a plane wall: Significance of the drop viscosity and the effect of an insoluble surfactant
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Publication:3539041
DOI10.1063/1.869995zbMath1147.76541OpenAlexW2027456104MaRDI QIDQ3539041
Publication date: 17 November 2008
Published in: Physics of Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.869995
Related Items (13)
Simulations of impinging droplets with surfactant-dependent dynamic contact angle ⋮ Strongly coupled interaction between a ridge of fluid and an inviscid airflow ⋮ Gravitational effects on the deformation of a droplet adhering to a horizontal solid surface in shear flow ⋮ A level-set method for two-phase flows with moving contact line and insoluble surfactant ⋮ Modelling a surfactant-covered droplet on a solid surface in three-dimensional shear flow ⋮ Nonsingular boundary integral method for deformable drops in viscous flows ⋮ Interactions between stably rolling leukocytes in vivo ⋮ Linear shear flow past a hemispherical droplet adhering to a solid surface ⋮ Interfacial dynamics for Stokes flow. ⋮ A level-set approach for simulations of flows with multiple moving contact lines with hysteresis ⋮ Adaptive triangulation of evolving, closed, or open surfaces by the advancing-front method ⋮ Exact solutions for the formation of stagnant caps of insoluble surfactant on a planar free surface ⋮ A thin rivulet or ridge subject to a uniform transverse shear stress at its free surface due to an external airflow
Cites Work
- Motion and deformation of liquid drops, and the rheology of dilute emulsions in simple shear flow
- A finite volume/boundary element method for flow past interfaces in the presence of surfactants, with application to shear flow past a viscous drop
- The effect of surfactants on drop deformation and on the rheology of dilute emulsions in Stokes flow
- Displacement of fluid droplets from solid surfaces in low-Reynolds-number shear flows
- Shear flow disturbance due to a hole in the plane
- Shear flow over a liquid drop adhering to a solid surface
- Stokes flow past slits and holes
- A spectral boundary element approach to three-dimensional Stokes flow
- The effect of the contact line on droplet spreading
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