Numerical Investigation on Droplet Wetting Effect With the MPS Method

Author(s):  
Xiao Chen ◽  
Zhongguo Sun ◽  
Guang Xi

The wetting effect of droplets is widely encountered in various industrial processes, such as mist cooling, dropwise condensation and electro wetting. Since these complicated processes are mostly free surface flow with large deformation, the moving particle semi-implicit (MPS) method is used for simulation in this study. The MPS method is a kind of Lagrangian meshless method and has advantages in simulating incompressible flows with large deformation. In order to simulate the surface tensions and interface tensions of different substances, the interparticle potential method was used in this paper. However, under the conventional surface tension model, the stable and well-formed droplets are hard to simulate due to the particle clustering and the shape distortion. In this paper, the parameters of interparticle potential model were studied and optimized to resolve these problems. Additionally, with the improved surface tension model, the oscillation and deformation process of a square droplet was simulated, and the result of which agreed well with the theoretical results. A circular relative error was defined to assess the final stable, well-formed droplet. Besides, the shrinkage and wetting effect, due to the surface tension, between multi-substances (gas-liquid, solid-liquid or liquid-liquid) were examined and analyzed. The calculated wetting angle and wetting area were extracted and agreed with the analytical ones. The wetting relationships under different interface tensions agreed with the lowest energy principle. The droplets with different substances would wet each other in a certain order due to the differences between their interface tensions. The self-assembly processing in Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) was simulated and the component finally moved to directly above the adhesive area.

2021 ◽  
pp. 105283
Author(s):  
Qixin Liu ◽  
Zhongguo Sun ◽  
Yijie Sun ◽  
Kai Zhang ◽  
Guang Xi

1996 ◽  
Vol 118 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyi He ◽  
Micah Dembo

We present numerical computations of the deformation of an oil-droplet under the influence of a surface tension gradient generated by the surfactant released at the poles (the Greenspan experiment). We find this deformation to be very small under the pure surface tension gradient. To explain the large deformation of oil droplets observed in Greenspan’s experiments, we propose the existence of a phoretic force generated by the concentration gradient of the surfactant. We show that this hypothesis successfully explains the available experimental data and we propose some further tests.


2017 ◽  
Vol 66 ◽  
pp. 95-116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farnoush A. Daneshvar ◽  
G. Reza Rakhshandehroo ◽  
Nasser Talebbeydokhti

2018 ◽  
Vol 86 ◽  
pp. 236-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kirill D. Nikitin ◽  
Kirill M. Terekhov ◽  
Yuri V. Vassilevski

1983 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 369-383
Author(s):  
Tilena Kougnima ◽  
René Kahawita

The purpose of the laboratory investigation reported here has been to study the conditions under which vortices appear in the free surface flow upstream of a vertically inverted intake in a circular sump. The influence of geometry, approach conditions, size, and relative position of the intake in the sump has been studied. The effect of viscosity, surface tension, and inertia forces on the formation of vortices has been examined. A discussion of the results and the principal conclusions drawn permit certain recommendations to be made at the conceptual stage of pumping pits.


Author(s):  
Xiao Wen ◽  
Decheng Wan

In the present study, three-layer-liquid sloshing in a rigid tank is simulated based on the newly developed multiphase MPS method. Firstly, the multiphase MPS method is introduced in detail, including the basic particle interaction models and the special interface treatments employed to extend single phase MPS solver to multiphase flows simulations. The new multiphase MPS method treats the multifluid system as the multi-density and multi-viscosity fluid, thus only a single set of equations needs to be solved for all phases. Besides, extra density smoothing technique, interparticle viscosity model and surface tension model are included in the present method for interface particles. The new multiphase MPS method is then applied to simulate three-layer-liquid sloshing in a rigid tank and verified through comparison with the experiment conducted by Molin et al. [1]. The predicted motion of interfaces by the present method shows a good agreement with the experimental data and other numerical results.


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