3 research outputs found

    Plethora of transitions during breakup of liquid filaments.

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    Thinning and breakup of liquid filaments are central to dripping of leaky faucets, inkjet drop formation, and raindrop fragmentation. As the filament radius decreases, curvature and capillary pressure, both inversely proportional to radius, increase and fluid is expelled with increasing velocity from the neck. As the neck radius vanishes, the governing equations become singular and the filament breaks. In slightly viscous liquids, thinning initially occurs in an inertial regime where inertial and capillary forces balance. By contrast, in highly viscous liquids, initial thinning occurs in a viscous regime where viscous and capillary forces balance. As the filament thins, viscous forces in the former case and inertial forces in the latter become important, and theory shows that the filament approaches breakup in the final inertial-viscous regime where all three forces balance. However, previous simulations and experiments reveal that transition from an initial to the final regime either occurs at a value of filament radius well below that predicted by theory or is not observed. Here, we perform new simulations and experiments, and show that a thinning filament unexpectedly passes through a number of intermediate transient regimes, thereby delaying onset of the inertial-viscous regime. The new findings have practical implications regarding formation of undesirable satellite droplets and also raise the question as to whether similar dynamical transitions arise in other free-surface flows such as coalescence that also exhibit singularities.The authors thank Dr. Pankaj Doshi for several insightful discussions. This work was supported by the Basic Energy Sciences program of the US Department of Energy (DE-FG02-96ER14641), Procter & Gamble USA, the Chevron Corporation, the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (Grant EP/H018913/1), the John Fell Oxford University Press Research Fund, and the Royal Society.This is the final published version. It first appeared via PNAS at http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.141854111

    Drop-on-Demand Inkjet Printing of Thermally Tunable Liquid Crystal Microlenses

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    In this letter, the authors demonstrate Drop-on-Demand printing of variable focus, polarization-independent, liquid crystal (LC) microlenses. By carefully selecting the surface treatment applied to a glass substrate, the authors are able to deposit droplets with a well-defined curvature and contact angle, which result in micron-sized lenses with focal lengths on the order of 300–900 µm. Observations with an optical polarizing microscope confirm the homeotopic alignment of the LC director in the droplets, which is in accordance with the polarization independent focal length. Results show that microlenses of different focal lengths can be fabricated by depositing successive droplets onto the same location on the substrate, which can then be used to build up programmable and arbitrary arrays of microlenses of various lens sizes and focal lengths. Finally, the authors utilize the thermal dependency of the order parameter of the LC to demonstrate facile tuning of the focal length. This technique has the potential to offer a low-cost solution to the production of variable focus, arbitrary, microlens arrays.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
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