Pinning, de-pinning and re-pinning of a slowly varying rivulet

The solutions for the unidirectional flow of a thin rivulet with prescribed volume flux down an inclined planar substrate are used to describe the locally unidirectional flow of a rivulet with constant width (i.e. pinned contact lines) but slowly varying contact angle as well as the possible pinning...

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প্রধান লেখক: Paterson, C, Wilson, S, Duffy, B
বিন্যাস: Journal article
প্রকাশিত: 2013
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author Paterson, C
Wilson, S
Duffy, B
author_facet Paterson, C
Wilson, S
Duffy, B
author_sort Paterson, C
collection OXFORD
description The solutions for the unidirectional flow of a thin rivulet with prescribed volume flux down an inclined planar substrate are used to describe the locally unidirectional flow of a rivulet with constant width (i.e. pinned contact lines) but slowly varying contact angle as well as the possible pinning and subsequent de-pinning of a rivulet with constant contact angle and the possible depinning and subsequent re-pinning of a rivulet with constant width as they flow in the azimuthal direction from the top to the bottom of a large horizontal cylinder. Despite being the same locally, the global behaviour of a rivulet with constant width can be very different from that of a rivulet with constant contact angle. In particular, while a rivulet with constant non-zero contact angle can always run from the top to the bottom of the cylinder, the behaviour of a rivulet with constant width depends on the value of the width. Specifically, while a narrow rivulet can run all the way from the top to the bottom of the cylinder, a wide rivulet can run from the top of the cylinder only to a critical azimuthal angle. The scenario in which the hitherto pinned contact lines of the rivulet de-pin at the critical azimuthal angle and the rivulet runs from the critical azimuthal angle to the bottom of the cylinder with zero contact angle but slowly varying width is discussed. The pinning and de-pinning of a rivulet with constant contact angle, and the corresponding situation involving the de-pinning and re-pinning of a rivulet with constant width at a non-zero contact angle which generalises the de-pinning at zero contact angle discussed earlier, are described. In the latter situation, the mass of fluid on the cylinder is found to be a monotonically increasing function of the constant width.
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spelling oxford-uuid:fadc01ad-26f7-4098-acdd-a89ef0619e2d2022-03-27T13:09:24ZPinning, de-pinning and re-pinning of a slowly varying rivuletJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:fadc01ad-26f7-4098-acdd-a89ef0619e2dMathematical Institute - ePrints2013Paterson, CWilson, SDuffy, BThe solutions for the unidirectional flow of a thin rivulet with prescribed volume flux down an inclined planar substrate are used to describe the locally unidirectional flow of a rivulet with constant width (i.e. pinned contact lines) but slowly varying contact angle as well as the possible pinning and subsequent de-pinning of a rivulet with constant contact angle and the possible depinning and subsequent re-pinning of a rivulet with constant width as they flow in the azimuthal direction from the top to the bottom of a large horizontal cylinder. Despite being the same locally, the global behaviour of a rivulet with constant width can be very different from that of a rivulet with constant contact angle. In particular, while a rivulet with constant non-zero contact angle can always run from the top to the bottom of the cylinder, the behaviour of a rivulet with constant width depends on the value of the width. Specifically, while a narrow rivulet can run all the way from the top to the bottom of the cylinder, a wide rivulet can run from the top of the cylinder only to a critical azimuthal angle. The scenario in which the hitherto pinned contact lines of the rivulet de-pin at the critical azimuthal angle and the rivulet runs from the critical azimuthal angle to the bottom of the cylinder with zero contact angle but slowly varying width is discussed. The pinning and de-pinning of a rivulet with constant contact angle, and the corresponding situation involving the de-pinning and re-pinning of a rivulet with constant width at a non-zero contact angle which generalises the de-pinning at zero contact angle discussed earlier, are described. In the latter situation, the mass of fluid on the cylinder is found to be a monotonically increasing function of the constant width.
spellingShingle Paterson, C
Wilson, S
Duffy, B
Pinning, de-pinning and re-pinning of a slowly varying rivulet
title Pinning, de-pinning and re-pinning of a slowly varying rivulet
title_full Pinning, de-pinning and re-pinning of a slowly varying rivulet
title_fullStr Pinning, de-pinning and re-pinning of a slowly varying rivulet
title_full_unstemmed Pinning, de-pinning and re-pinning of a slowly varying rivulet
title_short Pinning, de-pinning and re-pinning of a slowly varying rivulet
title_sort pinning de pinning and re pinning of a slowly varying rivulet
work_keys_str_mv AT patersonc pinningdepinningandrepinningofaslowlyvaryingrivulet
AT wilsons pinningdepinningandrepinningofaslowlyvaryingrivulet
AT duffyb pinningdepinningandrepinningofaslowlyvaryingrivulet