posted on 2018-07-30, 00:00authored byCarlo Rigoni, Stefano Bertoldo, Matteo Pierno, Delphine Talbot, Ali Abou-Hassan, Giampaolo Mistura
We
report a comprehensive study of the division of ferrofluid drops
caused by their interaction with a permanent magnet. As the magnet
gradually approaches the sessile drop, the drop deforms into a spiked
cone and then divides into two daughter droplets. This process is
the result of a complex interplay between the polarizing effect caused
by the magnetic field and the magnetic attraction due to the field
gradient. As a first attempt to describe it, during each scan we identify
two characteristic distances between the magnet and the drop: zmax, corresponding to the drop reaching its
maximum height, and zsaddle, corresponding
to the formation of a saddle point on the drop peak identifying the
beginning of the drop breakup. We have investigated the location of
these two points using sessile drops of ferrofluid water solutions
at various concentrations and volumes, deposited on four surfaces
of different wettability. An empirical scaling law based on dimensionless
variables is found to accurately describe these experimental observations.
We have also measured the maximum diameter of the drops right before
the division and found that it is very close to a critical size, which
depends on the magnetic attraction.