论文标题
牛顿和非牛顿液的影响形成的床单扩展中的双轴延伸粘性耗散
Biaxial extensional viscous dissipation in sheets expansion formed by impact of drops of Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids
论文作者
论文摘要
我们研究了由简单的牛顿流体或高分子水溶性聚合物链的溶液制成的自由扩展的液体板。滴由滴对石英板的影响产生的石英板,覆盖有薄薄的液氮层,这得益于Leidenfrost的逆效应,可抑制剪切粘性耗散。片片径向扩展,直到达到最大直径并随后退缩。实验表明存在两个膨胀状态:毛细管状态,其中最大膨胀由表面张力控制,并且不依赖于粘度和粘性状态,其中膨胀随粘度的增加而降低。在粘性状态下,与具有可比的零剪切粘度的牛顿样品相比,聚合样品的薄板扩展得到了强烈的增强。我们表明,牛顿和非牛顿流体的数据在独特的主曲线上崩溃,其中最大膨胀因子与相关的有效双轴延伸大孔数绘制了取决于流体密度,表面张力和双轴扩展粘度。对于牛顿液,这种双轴延伸粘度是剪切粘度的六倍。相比之下,对于非牛顿液,鉴定出特征性的魏森堡数依赖性双轴粘度,这与文献中的实验性和理论结果定量一致。
We investigate freely expanding liquid sheets made of either simple Newtonian fluids or solutions of high molecular water-soluble polymer chains. A sheet is produced by the impact of a drop on a quartz plate covered with a thin layer of liquid nitrogen that suppresses shear viscous dissipation thanks to an inverse Leidenfrost effect. The sheet expands radially until reaching a maximum diameter and subsequently recedes. Experiments indicate the presence of two expansion regimes: the capillary regime, where the maximum expansion is controlled by surface tension forces and does not depend on the viscosity, and the viscous regime, where the expansion is reduced with increasing viscosity. In the viscous regime, the sheet expansion for polymeric samples is strongly enhanced as compared to that of Newtonian samples with comparable zero-shear viscosity. We show that data for Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids collapse on a unique master curve where the maximum expansion factor is plotted against the relevant effective biaxial extensional Ohnesorge number that depends on fluid density, surface tension and the biaxial extensional viscosity. For Newtonian fluids, this biaxial extensional viscosity is six times the shear viscosity. By contrast, for the non- Newtonian fluids, a characteristic Weissenberg number-dependent biaxial extensional viscosity is identified, which is in quantitative agreement with experimental and theoretical results reported in the literature for biaxial extensional flows of polymeric liquids.