화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, Vol.125, No.1, 11-23, 2005
Impact dynamics of drops on thin films of viscoelastic wormlike micelle solutions
The impact dynamics of water drops on thin films of viscoelastic wormlike micelle solutions is experimentally studied using a high-speed digital video camera at frame rates up to 4000 frame/s. The composition and thickness of the thin film is modified to investigate the effect of fluid rheology on the evolution of crown growth, the formation of satellite droplets and the formation of the Worthington jet. The experiments are performed using a series of wormlike micelle solutions composed of a surfactant, cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB), and a salt, sodium salicylate (Nasal), in deionized water. The linear viscoelastic shear theology of the wormlike micelle solutions is well described by a Maxwell model with a single relaxation time while the steady shear rheology is found to shear thin quite heavily. In transient homogeneous uniaxial extension, the wormlike micelle solutions demonstrate significant strain hardening. The size and velocity of the impacting drop is varied to study the relative importance of Weber, Ohnesorge, and Deborah numbers on the impact dynamics. The addition of elasticity to the thin film fluid is found to suppress the crown growth and the formation of satellite drops with the largest effects observed at small film thicknesses. A new form of the splashing threshold is postulated which accounts for the effects of viscoelasticity and collapses the satellite droplet data onto a single master curve dependent only on dimensionless film thickness and the underlying surface roughness. Additionally, a plateau is observed in the growth of the maximum height of the Worthington jet height with increasing impact velocity. It is postulated that the complex behavior of the Worthington jet growth is the result of a dissipative mechanism stemming from the scission of wormlike micelles. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.