Drop impacting on a single layer of particles: Evolution of ring without particles

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Abstract

In this study, we examined the impacts of a millimeter sized water drop hitting a layer of uniformly distributed particles on a hydrophilic/hydrophobic glass slide. A ring/disc structure without particles was formed and modified by two mechanisms: pushout and pullback. The pushout factor dominated the process when the drop hit on the hydrophilic glass slide, while the pullback factor played a decisive role during impact on the hydrophobic surface. The rebound of a drop on the hydrophobic surface formed a disc-shaped ring. We showed that the ratio of the effects of these two factors on the ring/disc width were independent from the impact speed, in both experimental and scaling analyses. Our results also suggested that higher hydrophobicity of a water drop on the hydrophobic glass slide, instead of a polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) particle surface, resulted in a lower maximum spreading distance when the drop hit the PMMA particle layer on a hydrophobic surface.

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Zheng, J., Li, J., Tao, F., Zhang, L., Huang, Y., Wang, S., & Chen, G. (2019). Drop impacting on a single layer of particles: Evolution of ring without particles. Physics of Fluids, 31(4). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5090909

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