Universal Rim Thickness in Unsteady Sheet Fragmentation
Author(s)
Wang, Yanlei; Abhijit Dandekar, Raj; Bustos, Nicole Alejandra; Poulain, Stephane; Bourouiba, Lydia
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Unsteady fragmentation of a fluid bulk into droplets is important for epidemiology as it governs the transport of pathogens from sneezes and coughs, or from contaminated crops in agriculture. It is also ubiquitous in industrial processes such as paint, coating, and combustion. Unsteady fragmentation is distinct from steady fragmentation on which most theoretical efforts have been focused thus far. We address this gap by studying a canonical unsteady fragmentation process: the breakup from a drop impact on a finite surface where the drop fluid is transferred to a free expanding sheet of time-varying properties and bounded by a rim of time-varying thickness. The continuous rim destabilization selects the final spray droplets, yet this process remains poorly understood. We combine theory with advanced image analysis to study the unsteady rim destabilization. We show that, at all times, the rim thickness is governed by a local instantaneous Bond number equal to unity, defined with the instantaneous, local, unsteady rim acceleration. This criterion is found to be robust and universal for a family of unsteady inviscid fluid sheet fragmentation phenomena, from impacts of drops on various surface geometries to impacts on films. We discuss under which viscous and viscoelastic conditions the criterion continues to govern the unsteady rim thickness.
Date issued
2018-05Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Fluid Dynamics of Disease Transmission LaboratoryJournal
Physical Review Letters
Publisher
American Physical Society
Citation
Wang, Y. et al. "Universal Rim Thickness in Unsteady Sheet Fragmentation." Physical Review Letters 120, 20 (May 2018): 204503 © 2018 American Physical Society
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0031-9007
1079-7114