The development of transient fingering patterns during the spreading of surfactant coated films
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3543906
DOI10.1063/1.870185zbMath1149.76474OpenAlexW1996465851MaRDI QIDQ3543906
Sandra M. Troian, Omar K. Matar
Publication date: 5 December 2008
Published in: Physics of Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://authors.library.caltech.edu/4949/
Related Items
Interfacial destabilization and atomization driven by surface acoustic waves, A conservative interface-interaction model with insoluble surfactant, A diffuse-interface method for two-phase flows with soluble surfactants, Simple waves and shocks in a thin film of a perfectly soluble anti-surfactant solution, Interfacial hydrodynamic waves driven by chemical reactions, Time-dependent free-surface thin film flows over topography, Thinning and disturbance growth in liquid films mobilized by continuous surfactant delivery, Fingering phenomena created by a soluble surfactant deposition on a thin liquid film, Models for Marangoni drying, Pinchoff and satellite formation in surfactant covered viscous threads, Unstable van der Waals driven line rupture in Marangoni driven thin viscous films, Nonlinear evolution of thin free viscous films in the presence of soluble surfactant, Effect of Nanoscale Structure of Solid Surface on Moving Droplet, Flow on surfactant-laden thin films down an inclined plane, Surfactant-induced fingering phenomena in thin film flow down an inclined plane, Finite element simulation of three-dimensional free-surface flow problems
Cites Work
- The entry of a falling film into a pool and the air-entrainment problem
- The dynamics of a localized surfactant on a thin film
- Monolayer flow on a thin film
- Dynamics and transport of a localized soluble surfactant on a thin film
- Insoluble surfactant spreading on a thin viscous film: shock evolution and film rupture
- The spreading of heat or soluble surfactant along a thin liquid film
- Stability of Newtonian and viscoelastic dynamic contact lines
- Linear stability and transient growth in driven contact lines