Capillary forces exerted by liquid drops caught between crossed cylinders. A 3-D meniscus problem with free contact line
Abstract
The Young-Laplace equation is solved for three-dimensional menisci between crossed cylinders, with either the contact line fixed or the contact angle prescribed, by means of the Galerkin/finite element method. Shapes are computed, and with them the practically important quantities: drop volume, wetted area, capillary pressure force, surface tension force, and the total force exerted by the drop on each cylinder. The results show that total capillary force between cylinders increases with decreasing contact angle, i.e. with better wetting. Capillary force is also increases with decreasing drop volume, approaching an asymptotic limit. However, the wetted area on each cylinder decreases with decreasing drop volume, which raises the question of the optimum drop volume to strive for, when permanent bonding is sought from solidified liquid. For then the strength of the bond is likely to depend upon the area of contact, which is the wetted area when the bonding agent was introduced in liquid form.
- Publication:
-
2d International Colloquium on Drops and Bubbles
- Pub Date:
- March 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982drbu.coll..308P
- Keywords:
-
- Cylindrical Bodies;
- Drops (Liquids);
- Interfacial Tension;
- Liquid-Solid Interfaces;
- Liquid-Vapor Interfaces;
- Menisci;
- Drop Size;
- Eigenvalues;
- Finite Element Method;
- Galerkin Method;
- Laplace Equation;
- Surface Energy;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer