Author:
CHEN JINNAN,STEBE KATHLEEN J.
Abstract
A neutrally buoyant droplet in a fluid possessing a temperature
gradient migrates
under the action of thermocapillarity. The drop pole in the high-temperature region
has a reduced surface tension. The surface pulls away from this low-tension region,
establishing a Marangoni stress which propels the droplet into the warmer fluid.
Thermocapillary migration is retarded by the adsorption of surfactant: surfactant is
swept to the trailing pole by surface convection, establishing a surfactant-induced
Marangoni stress resisting the flow (Barton & Subramanian 1990).The impact of surfactant adsorption on drop thermocapillary motion is studied for
two nonlinear adsorption frameworks in the sorption-controlled limit. The Langmuir
adsorption framework accounts for the maximum surface concentration
Γ′∞ that can
be attained for monolayer adsorption; the Frumkin adsorption framework accounts
for Γ′∞
and for non-ideal surfactant interactions. The compositional dependence of the
surface tension alters both the thermocapillary stress which drives the flow and the
surfactant-induced Marangoni stress which retards it. The competition between these
stresses determines the terminal velocity U′, which is given
by Young's velocity U′0 in
the absence of surfactant adsorption. In the regime where
adsorption–desorption and
surface convection are of the same order, U′ initially
decreases with surfactant
concentration for the Langmuir model. A minimum is then attained,
and U′
subsequently increases slightly with bulk concentration, but remains
significantly less than U′0. For cohesive
interactions in the Frumkin model, U′ decreases monotonically
with surfactant concentration, asymptoting to a value less
than the Langmuir velocity.
For repulsive interactions, U′ is non-monotonic, initially
decreasing with concentration, subsequently increasing for elevated
concentrations. The implications of
these results for using surfactants to control surface mobilities in thermocapillary
migration are discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
49 articles.
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