Effective slip over partially filled microcavities and its possible failure
Abstract
Motivated by the emerging applications of liquid-infused surfaces (LIS), we study the drag reduction and robustness of transverse flows over two-dimensional microcavities partially filled with an oily lubricant. Using separate simulations at different scales, characteristic contact line velocities at the fluid-solid intersection are first extracted from nano-scale phase field simulations and then applied to micron-scale two-phase flows, thus introducing a multiscale numerical framework to model the interface displacement and deformation within the cavities. As we explore the various effects of the lubricant-to-outer-fluid viscosity ratio μ2/μ1, the capillary number Ca, the static contact angle θs, and the filling fraction of the cavity δ, we find that the effective slip is most sensitive to the parameter δ. The effects of μ2/μ1 and θs are generally intertwined, but weakened if δ < 1. Moreover, for an initial filling fraction δ =0.94, our results show that the effective slip is nearly independent of the capillary number, when it is small. Further increasing Ca to about 0.01 μ1/μ2, we identify a possible failure mode, associated with lubricants draining from the LIS, for μ2/μ1 0.1. Very viscous lubricants ( μ2/μ1 >1), on the other hand, are immune to such failure due to their generally larger contact line velocity.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.