dc.description.abstract
The thermocapillary-buoyant flow in droplets in contact with a heated or a cooled substrate is of interest in numerous industrial fields including additive manufacturing, painting with suspension sprays or ink-jet printing. Non-uniform evaporation along the droplet surface can produce the well known coffee-stain effect, which is finding new applications in medical diagnostics and materials science [1]. While fast solidification or drying may be desirable in these fields, cooling or heating of the substrate as well as evaporation-induced thermal gradients [4] can trigger three dimensional instabilities of the flow inside the droplet. This changes the total heat and mass transfer and may even lead to a clustering of suspended particles [7].
The axisymmetric steady toroidal vortex flow in a one-component fluid is determined by buoyancy and thermocapillary forces [3]. Three-dimensional symmetry breaking is caused by Bénard-Marangoni cells in the center of shallow droplets [5] and by hydrothermal waves traveling along the droplet’s periphery [2, 4, 6]. Furthermore, the competition between evaporation and heat conduction through the substrate affects the thermal gradients near the contact line [4], modifying the azimuthal wave number.
A systematic investigation of the symmetry breaking phenomena is lacking. Therefore, we carry out a linear stability analysis of the thermocapillary-buoyant flow, assuming an indeformable spherical liquid–gas interface (small-capillary-number limit) and a perfectly conducting substrate. Critical Reynolds numbers, energy budgets and the most dangerous perturbations are computed for a range of Prandtl numbers, Grashof numbers and contact angles.
The basic flow is solved using a Finite Element library FEniCS, while the eigensolutions of the linearized problem are computed with the Arnoldi method implemented in ARPACK. The no-penetration boundary condition on the free surface is enforced with Nitsche’s weak formulation for non-boundary-fitted coordinates.
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