화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, Vol.469, 147-156, 2016
Drop impact on natural porous stones
Drop impact and spreading on three natural porous stones are experimentally determined using highspeed imaging and compared with spreading over an impermeable steel surface. The dynamic non wetting behavior during spreading and the hydrophobic contact angle >90 degrees is attributed to the presence of an air layer between the droplet and the porous substrate. As the contact line pins at maximum spreading on the porous stone, the maximum spreading determines the liquid contact area on such substrate. The droplet gets pinned when the air layer is broken at the contact line and capillary forces develop in fines pores at the droplet edge, pinning the droplet. Maximum spreading on porous stones increases with impact velocity but does not scale with Weber number at low impact velocity. It is demonstrated that dynamic wetting plays an important role in the spreading at low velocity and that the dynamic wetting as characterized by the dynamic contact angle 0(D) has to be taken into account for predicting the maximum spreading. Correcting the maximum spreading ratio with the dynamic wetting behavior, all data for porous stones and non-porous substrate collapse onto a single curve. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.