Título Mechanisms of spontaneous chain formation and subsequent microstructural evolution in shear-driven strongly confined drop monolayers
Autores Singha, Sagnik , Malipeddi, Abhilash Reddy , ZURITA GOTOR, MAURICIO, Sarkar, Kausik , Shen, Kevin , Loewenberg, Michael , Migler, Kalman B. , Blawzdziewicz, Jerzy
Publicación externa No
Medio Soft Matter
Alcance Article
Naturaleza Científica
Cuartil JCR 1
Cuartil SJR 1
Impacto JCR 3.14000
Impacto SJR 1.02900
Web https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85067582631&doi=10.1039%2fc9sm00536f&partnerID=40&md5=3325ff2e93e1f274b0dfe8e7cd942392
Fecha de publicacion 28/06/2019
ISI 000472216900007
Scopus Id 2-s2.0-85067582631
DOI 10.1039/c9sm00536f
Abstract It was experimentally demonstrated by Migler and his collaborators [Phys. Rev. Lett., 2001, 86, 1023; Langmuir, 2003, 19, 8667] that a strongly confined drop monolayer sheared between two parallel plates can spontaneously develop a flow-oriented drop-chain morphology. Here we show that the formation of the chain-like microstructure is driven by far-field Hele-Shaw quadrupolar interactions between drops, and that drop spacing within chains is controlled by the effective drop repulsion associated with the existence of confinement-induced reversing streamlines, i.e., the swapping trajectory effect. Using direct numerical simulations and an accurate quasi-2D model that incorporates quadrupolar and swapping-trajectory contributions, we analyze microstructural evolution in a monodisperse drop monolayer. Consistent with experimental observations, we find that drop spacing within individual chains is usually uniform. Further analysis shows that at low area fractions all chains have the same spacing, but at higher area fractions there is a large spacing variation from chain to chain. These findings are explained in terms of uncompressed and compressed chains. At low area fractions most chains are uncompressed (spacing equals l(st), which is the stable separation of an isolated pair). At higher area fractions compressed chains (with tighter spacing) are formed in a process of chain zipping along y-shaped structural defects. We also discuss the relevance of our findings to other shear-driven systems, such as suspensions of spheres in non-Newtonian fluids.
Palabras clave Drops; Microstructural evolution; Morphology; Non Newtonian flow; Non Newtonian liquids; Suspensions (fluids); Chain formation; Isolated pairs; Non-Newtonian fluids; Parallel plates; Quadrupolar inter
Miembros de la Universidad Loyola

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