Apparent-contact-angle model at partial wetting and evaporation: impact of surface forces.

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys

ESEME, Service des Basses Températures, UMR-E CEA / UJF-Grenoble 1, INAC, Grenoble, France.

Published: January 2013

This theoretical and numerical study deals with evaporation of a fluid wedge in contact with its pure vapor. The model describes a regime where the continuous wetting film is absent and the actual line of the triple gas-liquid-solid contact appears. A constant temperature higher than the saturation temperature is imposed at the solid substrate. The fluid flow is solved in the lubrication approximation. The introduction of the surface forces in the case of the partial wetting is discussed. The apparent contact angle (the gas-liquid interface slope far from the contact line) is studied numerically as a function of the substrate superheating, contact line velocity, and parameters related to the solid-fluid interaction (Young and microscopic contact angles, Hamaker constant, etc.). The dependence of the apparent contact angle on the substrate temperature is in agreement with existing approaches. For water, the apparent contact angle may be 20° larger than the Young contact angle for 1 K superheating. The effect of the surface forces on the apparent contact angle is found to be weak.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.87.012404DOI Listing

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