Wrapping a liquid drop with a thin elastic sheet

ORAL

Abstract

We study the wrapping of a liquid drop by an initially-planar ultrathin ($\sim 100$ nm) circular sheet. These elastic sheets can completely relax compressive stresses by forming wrinkles [1]. In the experiment, we find that when a small fraction of the drop is covered, the overall shape of the sheet (i.e. averaging over the wrinkles) is axisymmetric. As we shrink the drop further, the sheet develops radial folds that break the axisymmetry of the sheet and the drop. Our data are consistent with a model where the sheet selects the shape that minimizes the exposed liquid surface area. We thus identify a ``geometric wrapping'' regime, where the partially-wrapped shape depends only on the relative radii of the sheet and the drop; the global breaking of axisymmetry is independent of the elastic energy of the deformed sheet. This regime requires that bending energy is negligible compared to surface energy, in contrast to the ``capillary origami'' regime [2] where the static shape of the drop comes from a balance of bending and capillary forces.\\[4pt] [1] King et al., PNAS 109, 2012.\\[0pt] [2] Py et al., PRL 98, 2007.

Authors

  • Joseph Paulsen

    • University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Vincent D\'emery

    • University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Benny Davidovitch

    • University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Chris Santangelo

    • University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Thomas Russell

    • University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Narayanan Menon

    • University of Massachusetts Amherst