Torsional fracture of viscoelastic liquid bridges

ORAL

Abstract

Short liquid bridges are stable under the action of surface ten- sion. In applications like electronic packaging, food engineering, and additive manufacturing, this poses challenges to the clean and fast dispensing of viscoelastic fluids. Here, we investigate how viscoelastic liquid bridges can be destabilized by torsion. By combining high-speed imaging and numerical simulation, we show that concave surfaces of liquid bridges can localize shear, in turn localizing normal stresses and making the surface more con- cave. Such positive feedback creates an indent, which propagates toward the center and leads to breakup of the liquid bridge. The indent formation mechanism closely resembles edge fracture, an often undesired viscoelastic flow instability characterized by the sudden indentation of the fluid's free surface when the fluid is subjected to shear. By applying torsion, even short, capillary sta- ble liquid bridges can be broken in the order of 1 s. This may lead to the development of dispensing protocols that reduce substrate contamination by the satellite droplets and long capillary tails formed by capillary retraction, which is the current mainstream industrial method for destabilizing viscoelastic liquid bridges.

*S.T.C., A.M., S.J.H., and A.Q.S. acknowledge the support of Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate Univer- sity with subsidy funding from the Cabinet Office, Government of Japan. S.T.C., A.M., S.J.H., and A.Q.S. also acknowledge financial support from the Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) (Grants 21J10517, 19K15641, 18K03958, 21K03884, and 18H01135) and the Joint Research Projects supported by the JSPS and the Swiss National Science Foundation.

Publication: https://www.pnas.org/content/118/24/e2104790118

Presenters

  • Patrick D Anderson

    • Eindhoven University of Technology

Authors

  • San To Chan

    • Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University
  • Frank P van Berlo

    • Eindhoven University of Technology
  • Hammad A Faizi

    • Northwestern University
  • Atsushi Matsumotoa

    • Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University
  • Simon J Haward

    • Okinawa Institute of Science & Technology
  • Patrick D Anderson

    • Eindhoven University of Technology
  • Amy Q Shen

    • Okinawa Institute of Science & Technology