Abstract
An investigation is made into the dynamics involved in the movement
of the contact
line when a single liquid with an interface moves into a vacuum over a
smooth solid
surface. In order to remove the stress singularity at the contact line,
it is postulated
that slip between the liquid and the solid or some other mechanism occurs
very
close to the contact line. It is assumed that the flow produced is inertia
dominated
with the Reynolds number based on the slip length being very large. Following
a
procedure similar to that used by Cox (1986) for the viscous-dominated
situation
(in which the Reynolds number based on the macroscopic length scale was
assumed
very small) using matched asymptotic expansions, we obtain the dependence
of the
macroscopic dynamic contact angle on the contact line velocity over the
solid surface
for small capillary number and small slip length to macroscopic lengthscale
ratio.
These results for the inertia-dominated situation are then extended (at
the lowest
order in capillary number) to an intermediate Reynolds number situation
with the
Reynolds number based on the slip length being very small and that based
on the
macroscopic lengthscale being very large.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
118 articles.
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