Compression and fracture of ordered and disordered droplet rafts
Abstract
We simulate a two-dimensional array of droplets being compressed between two
walls. The droplets are adhesive due to an attractive depletion force. As one
wall moves toward the other, the droplet array is compressed and eventually
induced to rearrange. The rearrangement occurs via a fracture, where depletion
bonds are quickly broken between a subset of droplets. For monodisperse,
hexagonally ordered droplet arrays, this fracture is preceded by a maximum
force exerted on the walls, which drops rapidly after the fracture occurs. In
small droplet arrays a fracture is a single well-defined event, but for larger
droplet arrays, competing fractures can be observed. These are fractures
nucleated nearly simultaneously in different locations. Finally, we also study
the compression of bidisperse droplet arrays. The addition of a second droplet
size further disrupts fracture events, showing differences between ideal
crystalline arrays, crystalline arrays with a small number of defects, and
fully amorphous arrays. These results are in good agreement with previously
published experiments.
Authors
Illing PE; Ono-dit-Biot J-C; Dalnoki-Veress K; Weeks ER