Mechanisms of free-surface breakup in vibration-induced liquid atomization
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3531844
DOI10.1063/1.2434799zbMath1146.76561OpenAlexW2037693448MaRDI QIDQ3531844
Ari Glezer, Marc K. Smith, Bojan Vukasinovic
Publication date: 3 November 2008
Published in: Physics of Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2434799
Related Items (4)
Interfacial destabilization and atomization driven by surface acoustic waves ⋮ Pressure modes of the oscillating sessile drop ⋮ Evolution and breaking of parametrically forced capillary waves in a circular cylinder ⋮ Dynamics of a sessile drop in forced vibration
Cites Work
- Capillary instability and breakup of a viscous thread
- Nonlinear dynamics and breakup of free-surface flows
- A Cascade of Structure in a Drop Falling from a Faucet
- Computational and experimental analysis of dynamics of drop formation
- The motion of a falling liquid filament
- Stability of a capillary jet with linearly increasing axial velocity (with application to shaped charges)
- Influence of viscosity on the capillary instability of a stretching jet
- The nonlinear capillary instability of a liquid jet. Part 1. Theory
- The instability of capillary jets
- Direct droplet production from a liquid film: a new gas-assisted atomization mechanism
- Single drop impact onto liquid films: neck distortion, jetting, tiny bubble entrainment, and crown formation
- Drop formation in a one-dimensional approximation of the Navier–Stokes equation
- Theory of drop formation
- Recovery of the Rayleigh capillary instability from slender 1-D inviscid and viscous models
- Vibration-induced drop atomization and the numerical simulation of low-frequency single-droplet ejection
- Dynamics and breakup of a contracting liquid filament
- Parametric instability of the interface between two fluids
- The nonlinear capillary instability of a liquid jet. Part 2. Experiments on jet behaviour before droplet formation
- The nonlinear capillary instability of a liquid jet. Part 3. Experiments on satellite drop formation and control
- Capillary breakup of a viscous thread surrounded by another viscous fluid
This page was built for publication: Mechanisms of free-surface breakup in vibration-induced liquid atomization