24 research outputs found

    To grate a liquid into tiny droplets by its impact on a hydrophobic micro-grid

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    We report on experiments of drop impacting a hydrophobic micro-grid, of typical spacing a few tens of μ\mum. Above a threshold in impact speed, liquid emerges to the other side, forming micro-droplets of size about that of the grid holes. We propose a method to produce either a mono-disperse spray or a single tiny droplet of volume as small as a few picoliters corresponding to a volume division of the liquid drop by a factor of up to 105^5. We also discuss the discrepancy of the measured thresholds with that predicted by a balance between inertia and capillarity.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in Applied Physics Letter

    Droplets displacement and oscillations induced by ultrasonic surface acoustic waves: a quantitative study

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    We present an experimental study of a droplet interacting with an ultrasonic surface acoustic wave (SAW). Depending on the amplitude of the wave, the drop can either experience an internal flow with its contact-line pinned, or (at higher amplitude) move along the direction of the wave also with internal flow. Both situations appear together with oscillations of the drop free-surface. The physical origins of the internal mixing flow as well as the drop displacement and surface waves are still not well understood. In order to give insights of the underlying physics involved in these phenomena, we carried out an experimental and numerical study. The results suggest that the surface deformation of the drop can be related as a combination between acoustic streaming effect and radiation pressure inside the drop.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figures. To appear in Physical Review

    Laminar-turbulent boundary-layer transition over a rough rotating disk

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    Boundary-layer transition over a disk spinning under water is investigated. Transitional Reynolds numbers, Re-c, and associated boundary-layer velocity profiles are determined from flow-visualizations and hot-film measurements, respectively. The value of Re-c and the velocity profiles are studied as a function of the disk's surface roughness. It is found that transition over rough disks occurs in a similar fashion to that over smooth disks, i.e., abruptly and axisymmetrically at well-defined radii. Wall roughness has little effect on Re-c until a threshold relative roughness is reached. Above the threshold Re-c decreases sharply. The decrease is consistent with the drop one expects for our flow for the absolute instability discovered by Lingwood [J. Fluid Mech. 299, 17 (1995); 314, 373 (1996); 331, 405 (1997)]. This indicates that the Lingwood absolute instability may continue to play a major role in the transition process even for large relative roughness. (C) 2003 American Institute of Physics

    Granular spirals on erodible sand bed submitted to a circular fluid motion

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    An experimental study of a granular surface submitted to a circular fluid motion is presented. The appearance of an instability along the sand-water interface is observed beyond a critical radius rcr_c. This creates ripples with a spiral shape on the granular surface. A phase diagram of such patterns is constructed and discussed as a function of the rotation speed ω\omega of the flow and as a function of the height of water hh above the surface. The study of rcr_c as a function of hh, ω\omega and rr parameters is reported. Thereafter, rcr_c is shown to depend on the rotation speed according to a power law. The ripple wavelength is found to decrease when the rotation speed increases and is proportional to the radial distance rr. The azimuthal angle \az of the spiral arms is studied. It is found that \az scales with hωrh\omega r. This lead to the conclusion that \az depends on the fluid momentum. Comparison with experiments performed with fluids allows us to state that the spiral patterns are not the signature of an instability of the boundary layer.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, using RevTeX4, submitted for publication (2002

    Brisure de bulles dans un écoulement oscillant sur Terre et en gravité réduite

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    The stability of centimeter scale air bubbles is studied in quiescent suspending liquid under an imposed oscillatory acceleration field. Experiments were performed in reduced- and normal-gravity environments. A strong acceleration resulted in an instability leading to the breakups of the bubbles in both gravity environments. The breakup onset was investigated and found to be characterized by a critical acceleration acr . The influence of the liquid viscosity and the gravitational environment was studied. Empirical correlations for the onset are presented and discussed with the intention to reveal splitting mechanism. The inertial mechanism often deemed to cause the breakup of drops sub jected to a rapid gas stream is shown to give explanations consistent with the experiments. A breakup criterion for both gravitational environments is proposed through discussions from an energetic point of view

    Micro ripples, sand ripples and their universal wavelength scaling

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    Results from experiments investigating oscillatory motion of a fluid carrying suspended micron-sized particles in a capillary tube (diameter: 288Pm) are summarized - the experimental set up is illustrated in Fig. 1. The oscillatory fluid motion is driven by a computer-controlled syringe pump and filmed with two video cameras A and B; for details refer to Ref. 1. The experiments show that initially uniformly distributed particles can segregate and accumulate to form regularly spaced micron-sized particle clusters within the capillary tube (Fig. 2). As far as we are aware these represent the smallest ripple structures that have hitherto been reported. The wavelength of the micro clusters is compared to wavelength data for macroscopic sand-ripple patterns from the literature for studies conducted over a wide range of substantially different experimental conditions. It is found that the wavelength of the micro ripples follows the same universal scaling that was obtained in Ref. 2 for the wavelength of the macroscopic sand-ripple patterns. This agreement of the scaling suggests that relevant local scales on the surface of the granular layer, where the ripples form, govern the ripple-formation mechanism. Hence, all global scales and global flow features are irrelevant. Prompted by this conclusion a dimensional and asymptotic analysis is performed1 yielding a power-law scaling exponent that agrees to within 4% with that found in Ref. 2 from experimental data. This very good agreement theoretically supports the universality of the scaling obtained in Ref. 2 on a purely experimental basis
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