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