Based on mesoscale lattice Boltzmann (LB) numerical simulations, we
investigate the effects of viscoelasticity on the break-up of liquid threads in
microfluidic cross-junctions, where droplets are formed by focusing a liquid
thread of a dispersed (d) phase into another co-flowing continuous (c)
immiscible phase. Working at small Capillary numbers, we investigate the
effects of non-Newtonian phases in the transition from droplet formation at the
cross-junction (DCJ) to droplet formation downstream of the cross-junction (DC)
(Liu & Zhang, Phys.Fluids.23, 082101 (2011)). We will
analyze cases with DropletViscoelasticity (DV), where viscoelastic
properties are confined in the dispersed phase, as well as cases with MatrixViscoelasticity (MV), where viscoelastic properties are confined in
the continuous phase. Moderate flow-rate ratios Q≈O(1) of the
two phases are considered in the present study. Overall, we find that the
effects are more pronounced in the case with MV, where viscoelasticity is found
to influence the break-up point of the threads, which moves closer to the
cross-junction and stabilizes. This is attributed to an increase of the polymer
feedback stress forming in the corner flows, where the side channels of the
device meet the main channel. Quantitative predictions on the break-up point of
the threads are provided as a function of the Deborah number, i.e. the
dimensionless number measuring the importance of viscoelasticity with respect
to Capillary forces.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures. This Work applies the Numerical Methodology
described in arXiv:1406.2686 to the Problem of Droplet Generation in
Microfluidic Cross Junctions. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1508.0014