Film coating by directional droplet spreading on fibers
Abstract
Plants and insects use slender conical structures to transport and collect
small droplets, which are propelled along the conical structures due to
capillary action. These droplets can deposit a fluid film during their motion,
but despite its importance to many biological systems and industrial
applications the properties of the deposited film are unknown. We characterise
the film deposition by developing an asymptotic analysis together with
experimental measurements and numerical simulations based on the lubrication
equation. We show that the deposited film thickness depends significantly on
both the fiber radius and the droplet size, highlighting that the coating is
affected by finite size effects relevant to film deposition on fibres of any
slender geometry. We demonstrate that by changing the droplet size, while the
mean fiber radius and the Capillary number are fixed, the thickness of the
deposited film can change by an order of magnitude or more. We show that
self-propelled droplets have significant potential to create passively coated
structures.
Authors
Chan TS; Lee CL; Pedersen C; Dalnoki-Veress K; Carlson A