Travelling-wave similarity solutions for a steadily translating slender dry patch in a thin fluid film
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5261808
DOI10.1063/1.4803906zbMath1315.76009OpenAlexW1993835349MaRDI QIDQ5261808
Stephen K. Wilson, Yazariah Yatim, Brian R. Duffy
Publication date: 7 July 2015
Published in: Physics of Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/43867/
Related Items (3)
Special solutions for an equation arising in sand ripple dynamics ⋮ The halting of contact lines in slender viscous films driven by gravity and surface tension gradients ⋮ Surface-tension- and injection-driven spreading of a thin viscous film
Cites Work
- Unsteady gravity-driven slender rivulets of a power-law fluid
- A two-dimensional similarity solution for capillary driven flows
- Similarity solutions for slender dry patches with thermocapillarity
- Infinite interval problems arising in the model of a slender dry patch in a liquid film draining under gravity down an inclined plane
- Similarity solutions for unsteady shear-stress-driven flow of Newtonian and power-law fluids: slender rivulets and dry patches
- Criteria for the break-up of thin liquid layers flowing isothermally over solid surfaces
- On initial value problems for the flow in a thin sheet of viscous liquid
- On a slender dry patch in a liquid film draining under gravity down an inclined plane
- Similarity Solutions for Unsteady Gravity-Driven Slender Rivulets
- Dry arches within flowing films
- Stability and evolution of a dry spot
- Unidirectional flow of a thin rivulet on a vertical substrate subject to a prescribed uniform shear stress at its free surface
- Dynamics of a dry spot
- Moving Contact Lines: Scales, Regimes, and Dynamical Transitions
- A thin rivulet of perfectly wetting fluid subject to a longitudinal surface shear stress
- Wetting hysteresis of a dry patch left inside a flowing film
This page was built for publication: Travelling-wave similarity solutions for a steadily translating slender dry patch in a thin fluid film