Effect of interfacial slip on the cross-stream migration of a drop in an unbounded Poiseuille flow

2015 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shubhadeep Mandal ◽  
Aditya Bandopadhyay ◽  
Suman Chakraborty
1979 ◽  
Vol 92 (1) ◽  
pp. 131-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. C.-H. Chan ◽  
L. G. Leal

The cross-stream migration of a deformable drop in a unidirectional shear flow of a second-order fluid is considered. Expressions for the particle velocity due to the separate effects of deformation and viscoelastic rheology are obtained. The direction and magnitude of migration are calculated for the particular cases of Poiseuille flow and simple shear flow and compared with experimental data.


2016 ◽  
Vol 809 ◽  
pp. 726-774 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shubhadeep Mandal ◽  
Aditya Bandopadhyay ◽  
Suman Chakraborty

The effect of a uniform electric field on the motion of a drop in an unbounded plane Poiseuille flow is studied analytically. The drop and suspending media are considered to be Newtonian and leaky dielectric. We solve for the two-way coupled electric and flow fields analytically by using a double asymptotic expansion for small charge convection and small shape deformation. We obtain two important mechanisms of cross-stream migration of the drop: (i) shape deformation and (ii) charge convection. The second one is a new source of cross-stream migration of the drop in plane Poiseuille flow which is due to an asymmetric charge distribution on the drop surface. Our study reveals that charge convection can cause a spherical non-deformable drop to migrate in the cross-stream direction. The combined effect of charge convection and shape deformation significantly alters the drop velocity, drop trajectory and steady state transverse position of the drop. We predict that, depending on the orientation of the applied uniform electric field and the relevant drop/medium electrohydrodynamic parameters, the drop may migrate either towards the centreline of the flow or away from it. We obtain that the final steady state transverse position of the drop is independent of its initial transverse position in the flow field. Most interestingly, we show that the drop can settle in an off-centreline steady state transverse position. Two-dimensional numerical simulations are also performed to study the drop motion in the combined presence of plane Poiseuille flow and a tilted electric field. The drop trajectory and steady state transverse position of the drop obtained from numerical simulations are in qualitative agreement with the analytical results.


2017 ◽  
Vol 835 ◽  
pp. 170-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sayan Das ◽  
Shubhadeep Mandal ◽  
Suman Chakraborty

The motion of a viscous droplet in unbounded Poiseuille flow under the combined influence of bulk-insoluble surfactant and linearly varying temperature field aligned in the direction of imposed flow is studied analytically. Neglecting fluid inertia, thermal convection and shape deformation, asymptotic analysis is performed to obtain the velocity of a force-free surfactant-laden droplet. The droplet speed and direction of motion are strongly influenced by the interfacial transport of surfactant, which is governed by surface Péclet number. The present study is focused on the following two limiting situations of surfactant transport: (i) surface-diffusion-dominated surfactant transport considering small surface Péclet number, and (ii) surface-convection-dominated surfactant transport considering high surface Péclet number. Thermocapillary-induced Marangoni stress, the strength of which relative to viscous stress is represented by the thermal Marangoni number, has a strong influence on the distribution of surfactant on the droplet surface. The present study shows that the motion of a surfactant-laden droplet in the combined presence of temperature and imposed Poiseuille flow cannot be obtained by a simple superposition of the following two independent results: migration of a surfactant-free droplet in a temperature gradient, and the motion of a surfactant-laden droplet in a Poiseuille flow. The temperature field not only affects the axial velocity of the droplet, but also has a non-trivial effect on the cross-stream velocity of the droplet in spite of the fact that the temperature gradient is aligned with the Poiseuille flow direction. When the imposed temperature increases in the direction of the Poiseuille flow, the droplet migrates towards the flow centreline. The magnitude of both axial and cross-stream velocity components increases with the thermal Marangoni number. However, when the imposed temperature decreases in the direction of the Poiseuille flow, the magnitude of both axial and cross-stream velocity components may increase or decrease with the thermal Marangoni number. Most interestingly, the droplet moves either towards the flow centreline or away from it. The present study shows a critical value of the thermal Marangoni number beyond which the droplet moves away from the flow centreline which is in sharp contrast to the motion of a surfactant-laden droplet in isothermal flow, for which the droplet always moves towards the flow centreline. Interestingly, we show that the above picture may become significantly altered in the case where the droplet is not a neutrally buoyant one. When the droplet is less dense than the suspending medium, the presence of gravity in the direction of the Poiseuille flow can lead to cross-stream motion of the droplet away from the flow centreline even when the temperature increases in the direction of the Poiseuille flow. These results may bear far-reaching consequences in various emulsification techniques in microfluidic devices, as well as in biomolecule synthesis, vesicle dynamics, single-cell analysis and nanoparticle synthesis.


2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (22) ◽  
pp. 9993-10004
Author(s):  
Aiqing Liu ◽  
Zhenyue Yang ◽  
Lijun Liu ◽  
Jizhong Chen ◽  
Lijia An

Soft Matter ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (15) ◽  
pp. 3168-3178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Howard ◽  
Thomas M. Truskett ◽  
Arash Nikoubashman

Dilute polymer solutions under pressure-driven flow can drive cross-stream migration of a small Brownian droplet to the centerline of a planar microchannel.


1976 ◽  
Vol 77 (3) ◽  
pp. 593-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. C. Chatwin

In Poiseuille flow in a circular tube passive contaminant initially spread uniformly over the cross-section would be pulled out in a paraboloidal snout in the absence of any diffusive mechanism, and there would be a discontinuity in $\overline{C}$, the mean concentration over the cross-section, associated with the contaminant at the front of the snout. In reality molecular diffusion smooths out this snout in two ways: direct longitudinal diffusion and the interaction between lateral diffusion and advection. The effect of these two mechanisms is discussed, and determined for small values of κt/a2, where t is the time since injection, κ is the molecular diffusivity and a is the tube radius. For such values, important in many applications, the tube walls play no part in the smoothing process. It is shown that for $\kappa t/a^2 < 0.25(\overline{u}a/\kappa)^{-\frac{2}{3}}$, where $\overline{u}$ is the discharge velocity, the effect of longitudinal diffusion dominates over that of the interaction, which is, in turn, dominant for $\kappa t/a^2 > 2.5(\overline{u}a/\kappa)^{-\frac{2}{3}}$, when $\overline{C}$ is close to the form described by Lighthill (1966).


2018 ◽  
Vol 97 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Binita Nath ◽  
Gautam Biswas ◽  
Amaresh Dalal ◽  
Kirti Chandra Sahu

2017 ◽  
Vol 29 (8) ◽  
pp. 082004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sayan Das ◽  
Shubhadeep Mandal ◽  
Suman Chakraborty

Author(s):  
Victor B. Fedoseev

The dependence of the stationary distribution of blood components over the cross section of the cylindrical Poiseuille flow on the content of erythrocytes is described by the method of numerical simulation. A thermodynamic approach was used, in which dispersed phases are represented by a set of cellular components (erythrocytes, leukocytes, platelets), and blood plasma is considered as a low molecular weight dispersion medium. The simulation is based on the search for the minimum of the total energy of the system, including the chemical potentials and kinetic energy of all components. This state corresponds to the only solution describing the consistent distributions of all components of the multiphase flow over the section. Distributions of components were simulated, in which the content of leukocytes and platelets corresponds to the normal, for cases of normal, pathologically low (erythropenia) and high (erythrocytosis) content of erythrocytes. As an example, the Poiseuille flow in a vessel 1 mm in diameter with a shear rate of 10 s -1 is considered. According to the simulation results, the deviation of the number of erythrocytes from the norm leads to redistribution over the cross section of the flow of other components (leukocytes and platelets). The concentration of platelets and leukocytes has maximum values in the vicinity of the vessel walls with a low number of erythrocytes. When the number of red blood cells increases, maxima concentration of platelets and white blood cells are shifted to the center of the vessel and the proportion of red blood cells near the vessel walls increases


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