Abstract
The leading edge of a localized, insoluble surfactant monolayer,
advancing under
the action of surface-tension gradients over the free surface of a thin,
viscous, fluid
layer, behaves locally like a rigid plate. Since lubrication theory fails
to capture the
integrable stress singularity at the monolayer tip, so overestimating the
monolayer
length, we investigate the quasi-steady two-dimensional Stokes flow near
the tip,
assuming that surface tension or gravity keeps the free surface locally
at. Wiener–Hopf
and matched-eigenfunction methods are used to compute the ‘stick-slip’
flow
when the singularity is present; a boundary-element method is used to explore
the
nonlinear regularizing effects of weak ‘contaminant’
surfactant or surface diffusion.
In the limit in which gravity strongly suppresses film deformations, a
spreading
monolayer drives an unsteady return flow (governed by a nonlinear diffusion
equation)
beneath most of the monolayer, and a series of weak vortices in the fluid
ahead of
the tip. As contaminant or surface diffusion increase in strength, they
smooth the tip
singularity over short lengthscales, eliminate the local stress maximum
and ultimately
destroy the vortices. The theory is readily extended to cases in which
the film deforms
freely over long lengthscales. Limitations of conventional thin-film approximations
are discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
25 articles.
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