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arxiv: 1205.6141 · v1 · pith:2CUA3IFZnew · submitted 2012-05-28 · ❄️ cond-mat.soft · physics.chem-ph· physics.flu-dyn

Ultrafast Spontaneous Motion of Nanodroplets

classification ❄️ cond-mat.soft physics.chem-phphysics.flu-dyn
keywords dropletsgradientsurfacescurvaturemovespontaneouslytaperedwettability
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Making liquid droplets move spontaneously on solid surfaces is a key challenge in lab-on-chip and heat exchanger technologies. The best-known mechanism, a wettability gradient, does not generally move droplets rapidly enough and cannot drive droplets smaller than a critical size. Here we report how a curvature gradient is particularly effective at accelerating small droplets, and works for both hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces. Experiments for water droplets on tapered surfaces with curvature radii in the sub-millimeter range show a maximum speed of 0.28 m/s, two orders of magnitude higher than obtained by wettability gradient. We show that the force exerted on a droplet scales as the surface curvature gradient. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we observe nanoscale droplets moving spontaneously at over 100 m/s on tapered surfaces.

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