Impact of a microfluidic jet on a pendant droplet
Author(s)
Quetzeri-Santiago, Miguel A; Hunter, Ian W.; van der Meer, Devaraj; Fernández Rivas, David
DownloadPublished version (7.051Mb)
Publisher with Creative Commons License
Publisher with Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
High speed microfluidic jets can be generated by a thermocavitation process: from the evaporation of the liquid inside a microfluidic channel, a rapidly expanding bubble is formed and generates a jet through a flow focusing effect. Here, we study the impact and traversing of such jets on a pendant liquid droplet. Upon impact, an expanding cavity is created, and, above a critical impact velocity, the jet traverses the entire droplet. We predict the critical traversing velocity (i) from a simple energy balance and (ii) by comparing the Young–Laplace and dynamic pressures in the cavity that is created during the impact. We contrast the model predictions against experiments, in which we vary the liquid properties of the pendant droplet and find good agreement. In addition, we assess how surfactants and viscoelastic effects influence the critical impact velocity. Our results increase the knowledge of the jet interaction with materials of well-known physical properties.
Date issued
2021Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. BioInstrumentation Laboratory; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical EngineeringJournal
Soft Matter
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
Citation
Quetzeri-Santiago, Miguel A, Hunter, Ian W, van der Meer, Devaraj and Fernandez Rivas, David. 2021. "Impact of a microfluidic jet on a pendant droplet." Soft Matter, 17 (32).
Version: Final published version