2024 AIChE Annual Meeting

(400a) Droplet Coalescence -- the Tandem Roles of Interfacial Viscosity and Marangoni Stresses on This Process

Authors

Narsimhan, V. - Presenter, Purdue University
We perform boundary-integral simulations to explore the role of surface viscosity on the coalescence of two equal-sized droplets. We assume an insoluble surfactant monolayer, and numerically solve the droplet shape and surfactant surface coverage during a head-on collision by solving the Stokes equations inside and outside the droplet and a convection-diffusion equation at the drop surface. The surfactant obeys a Langmuir adsorption isotherm, and exhibits a 2D surface viscosity obeying the Boussinesq-Scriven constitutive relationship. We observe that the surface viscosity significantly delays coalescence and that the film drainage time depends only on the sum of the surface dilatational viscosity and surface shear viscosity. We provide explanations to these effects using lubrication theory, and provide scaling analyses for the drainage time versus capillary number and viscosity ratio. Lastly, we find that the mechanism of coalescence stabilization is very different for Marangoni effects compared to surface viscous effects. Whereas Marangoni effects delay drainage by increasing the dimpling of the thin film, surface viscosity delays drainage by widening the film and flattening it. We show thin film profiles for different combinations of Marangoni and surface viscous effects. Lastly, we conclude by discussing some preliminary results were we include the effect of surfactant adsorption and desorption, and discuss how surface viscous effects alter film drainage times in the kinetically-controlled adsorption/desorption regime.