9 research outputs found

    Diffusion-Dominated Pinch-Off of Ultralow Surface Tension Fluids

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    We study the breakup of a liquid thread inside another liquid at different surface tensions. In general, the pinch-off of a liquid thread is governed by the dynamics of fluid flow. However, when the interfacial tension is ultralow (2 to 3 orders lower than normal liquids), we find that the pinch-off dynamics can be governed by bulk diffusion. By studying the velocity and the profile of the pinch-off, we explain why the diffusion-dominated pinch-off takes over the conventional breakup at ultralow surface tensions.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Published versio

    Rayleigh-Taylor instability of viscous liquid films under a temperature-controlled inclined substrate

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    10.1103/physrevfluids.6.064001Physical Review Fluids666400

    Droplet Formation by Rupture of Vibration-Induced Interfacial Fingers

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    By imposing vibration to a core-annular flow of an aqueous two-phase system (ATPS) with ultralow interfacial tension, we observe a liquid finger protruding from the interface of an expanding jet. We find that the protruded finger breaks up only when its length-to-width ratio exceeds a threshold value. The breakup follows a constant wavelength-to-width ratio that is consistent with that of breakup under Rayleigh-Plateau instability. The mechanism is applicable to aqueous two-phase systems with a large range of viscosity ratios. The protruded finger can break up into small droplets that are monodisperse in size, controllable in generation frequency under a wide range of flow rates. This work suggests a way to generate small water–water droplets with high monodispersity and production rate from a single nozzle

    Emergence of Droplets at the Nonequilibrium All-Aqueous Interface in a Vertical Hele-Shaw Cell

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    The interfacial phenomena at liquid–liquid interfaces remain the subject of constant fascination in science and technology. Here, we show that fingers forming at the interface of nonequilibrium all-aqueous systems can spontaneously break into an array of droplets. The dynamic formation of droplets at the water–water (w/w) interface is observed when a less dense aqueous phase, for instance, the dextran solution, is placed on a denser aqueous phase, the polyethylene glycol solution, in a vertical Hele-Shaw cell. Because of the gradual diffusion of water from the upper phase into the lower phase, a dense layer appears at the nonequilibrium w/w interface. As a result, a periodic array of fingers emerge and sink. Remarkably, these fingers break up and an array of droplets are emitted from the interface. We characterize the wavelength of fingering by measuring the average distance between the dominant fingers. By varying the initial concentrations of the two nonequilibrium aqueous phases, we identify experimentally a phase diagram with a wide parameter space in which finger breaking occurs. Finally, plenty of droplets, spontaneously formed when one phase is continuously deposited onto another aqueous phase, further confirm the robustness of our experimental results. Our work suggests a simple yet efficient approach with a potential upscalability to generate all-aqueous droplets

    Emergence of Droplets at the Nonequilibrium All-Aqueous Interface in a Vertical Hele-Shaw Cell

    No full text
    The interfacial phenomena at liquid–liquid interfaces remain the subject of constant fascination in science and technology. Here, we show that fingers forming at the interface of nonequilibrium all-aqueous systems can spontaneously break into an array of droplets. The dynamic formation of droplets at the water–water (w/w) interface is observed when a less dense aqueous phase, for instance, the dextran solution, is placed on a denser aqueous phase, the polyethylene glycol solution, in a vertical Hele-Shaw cell. Because of the gradual diffusion of water from the upper phase into the lower phase, a dense layer appears at the nonequilibrium w/w interface. As a result, a periodic array of fingers emerge and sink. Remarkably, these fingers break up and an array of droplets are emitted from the interface. We characterize the wavelength of fingering by measuring the average distance between the dominant fingers. By varying the initial concentrations of the two nonequilibrium aqueous phases, we identify experimentally a phase diagram with a wide parameter space in which finger breaking occurs. Finally, plenty of droplets, spontaneously formed when one phase is continuously deposited onto another aqueous phase, further confirm the robustness of our experimental results. Our work suggests a simple yet efficient approach with a potential upscalability to generate all-aqueous droplets

    Emergence of Droplets at the Nonequilibrium All-Aqueous Interface in a Vertical Hele-Shaw Cell

    No full text
    The interfacial phenomena at liquid–liquid interfaces remain the subject of constant fascination in science and technology. Here, we show that fingers forming at the interface of nonequilibrium all-aqueous systems can spontaneously break into an array of droplets. The dynamic formation of droplets at the water–water (w/w) interface is observed when a less dense aqueous phase, for instance, the dextran solution, is placed on a denser aqueous phase, the polyethylene glycol solution, in a vertical Hele-Shaw cell. Because of the gradual diffusion of water from the upper phase into the lower phase, a dense layer appears at the nonequilibrium w/w interface. As a result, a periodic array of fingers emerge and sink. Remarkably, these fingers break up and an array of droplets are emitted from the interface. We characterize the wavelength of fingering by measuring the average distance between the dominant fingers. By varying the initial concentrations of the two nonequilibrium aqueous phases, we identify experimentally a phase diagram with a wide parameter space in which finger breaking occurs. Finally, plenty of droplets, spontaneously formed when one phase is continuously deposited onto another aqueous phase, further confirm the robustness of our experimental results. Our work suggests a simple yet efficient approach with a potential upscalability to generate all-aqueous droplets

    Emergence of Droplets at the Nonequilibrium All-Aqueous Interface in a Vertical Hele-Shaw Cell

    No full text
    The interfacial phenomena at liquid–liquid interfaces remain the subject of constant fascination in science and technology. Here, we show that fingers forming at the interface of nonequilibrium all-aqueous systems can spontaneously break into an array of droplets. The dynamic formation of droplets at the water–water (w/w) interface is observed when a less dense aqueous phase, for instance, the dextran solution, is placed on a denser aqueous phase, the polyethylene glycol solution, in a vertical Hele-Shaw cell. Because of the gradual diffusion of water from the upper phase into the lower phase, a dense layer appears at the nonequilibrium w/w interface. As a result, a periodic array of fingers emerge and sink. Remarkably, these fingers break up and an array of droplets are emitted from the interface. We characterize the wavelength of fingering by measuring the average distance between the dominant fingers. By varying the initial concentrations of the two nonequilibrium aqueous phases, we identify experimentally a phase diagram with a wide parameter space in which finger breaking occurs. Finally, plenty of droplets, spontaneously formed when one phase is continuously deposited onto another aqueous phase, further confirm the robustness of our experimental results. Our work suggests a simple yet efficient approach with a potential upscalability to generate all-aqueous droplets
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