posted on 2021-12-14, 14:41authored byDebarshi Debnath, Parmod Kumar, Sushanta K. Mitra
The
liquid droplet spreads over a solid surface to minimize the
surface energy when brought in direct contact with the surface. The
spreading process is rapid in the early stages, tends to slow down
during its progress, and has resulted in peculiarity due to the experimental
difficulties in the accurate determination of the contact line radius.
In the present numerical study, we found that drop spreading begins
with a viscosity-dominated Stokes regime, where contact radius scales
as r ∼ t for a wide range
of drop liquid viscosities. Subsequent to the Stokes regime, the inertial
regime is observed where contact radius scales as r ∼ t0.5 for low- to medium-viscous
droplets, whereas for very high viscous drops, the spreading dynamics
is completely dominated by the viscous regime. It is also found that
the equilibrium wetting condition does not affect the power-law scaling
for the contact radius of the drop. The amplitude of capillary waves
induced across the interface of the drop is observed to be sufficiently
high to cause necking and ejection of satellite drops from the main
drop during its spreading for low-viscous liquids from complete wetting
to partial wetting conditions. A regime plot between the Ohnesorge
number and advancing contact angle of the substrate is presented to
demarcate the regions of damped waves without pinch-off and drop spreading
with satellite drops.