Shear flow over a liquid drop adhering to a solid surface
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4714302
DOI10.1017/S0022112096000080zbMath0880.76021OpenAlexW1965378909MaRDI QIDQ4714302
Publication date: 7 January 1998
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022112096000080
contact lineasymptotic shapeiterative finite difference methodtransient deformationcontact-angle hysteresishydrostatic shapestability of stationary shapesuniform surface tension
Stokes and related (Oseen, etc.) flows (76D07) Capillarity (surface tension) for incompressible viscous fluids (76D45)
Related Items
Shear-driven circulation patterns in lipid membrane vesicles, Strongly coupled interaction between a ridge of fluid and an inviscid airflow, Gravitational effects on the deformation of a droplet adhering to a horizontal solid surface in shear flow, GNBC-based front-tracking method for the three-dimensional simulation of droplet motion on a solid surface, Flow past an array of cells that are adherent to the bottom plate of a flow channel, Analytical solution for two-phase flow within and outside a sphere under pure shear, Multiphase flow model to study channel flow dynamics of PEM fuel cells: deformation and detachment of water droplets, Onset of motion of a three-dimensional droplet on a wall in shear flow at moderate Reynolds numbers, Deformation of a liquid drop adhering to a plane wall: Significance of the drop viscosity and the effect of an insoluble surfactant, Nonsingular boundary integral method for deformable drops in viscous flows, Displacement of a two-dimensional immiscible droplet in a channel, Similarity solutions for unsteady shear-stress-driven flow of Newtonian and power-law fluids: slender rivulets and dry patches, Linear shear flow past a hemispherical droplet adhering to a solid surface, Interfacial dynamics for Stokes flow., A level-set approach for simulations of flows with multiple moving contact lines with hysteresis, Transition from squeezing to dripping in a microfluidic T-shaped junction, A thin rivulet or ridge subject to a uniform transverse shear stress at its free surface due to an external airflow
Cites Work