How a leak can stop itself

ORAL

Abstract

Small fluid leaks are a common - and often troublesome - occurrence in everyday life. We often consider what action is required to stop a leak, or to prevent one from starting in the first place, but here we consider somewhat different questions: how might a leak stop itself? What governing physics determines the moment and mechanism of this spontaneous arrest? We report experiments that quantify the initiation and spontaneous self-arrest of leaking fluid flows emerging from a small hole in a vertical tube as a function of hole size and surface hydrophobicity. We use high-speed imaging to capture the mechanism of flow-stop, and observe that the leaking fluid undergoes a Rayleigh-Plateau-like rivulet instability leading to the creation of a final, static "capping droplet" whose surface curvature prevents further leakage. We compute the potential energy landscape of such capping droplets as a function of volume, hole size, and material properties, and combine this with existing rivulet stability theory to predict when a flow-stop transition will occur.

*Acknowledgment is made to the Donors of the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund for partial support of this research. C.D.T. was funded by the Edward N. Perry 1968 and Cynthia W. Wood Summer Science Research Fellowship.

Presenters

  • Caroline D Tally

    • Williams College

Authors

  • Caroline D Tally

    • Williams College
  • Heather E Kurtz

    • Williams College
  • Rose B Tchuenkam

    • Williams College
  • Katharine E Jensen

    • Williams College