Shape evolutions of moving fluid threads under asymmetrical confinements

Bo Wang, Shuai Zhang, Xiaodong Chen*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This paper presents a combined experimental and numerical investigation designed to improve our understanding of how the shape of moving fluid threads evolves under asymmetrical confinements in both circular and square microchannels. Microfluidic devices with two junctions are designed to control the length of the fluid thread at the first junction and the deformation of the fluid thread at the second junction. Three different flow modes: Nonbreakup, loosely confined breakup, and tightly confined breakup, are identified for varying lengths of fluid threads and capillary number, and two boundaries are identified between the three modes. The deformation dynamics of the fluid threads evolving as difference modes are addressed to consider the effects of thread length and capillary number. Numerical simulations are carried out to determine how the curvature evolves for different flow modes in the square microchannel. The evolution of interface profiles is obtained numerically over a wide range of capillary number. Stop-flow simulations are then carried out to identify both the critical shape for the onset of the capillary instability during tightly confined breakup and the corresponding curvature distribution. This critical shape is found to be corresponding to the fluid thread with the critical length at the transitive boundary between the loosely confined and tightly confined situations.

Original languageEnglish
Article number042004
JournalPhysics of Fluids
Volume32
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2020

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