`Finding the point of no return': Understanding how a free-surface in a moving contact-line problem becomes unstable and how to suppress it

ORAL

Abstract

The moving-contact line between a fluid, liquid and a solid is a ubiquitous phenomenon, and determining the maximum speed at which a liquid can wet/dewet a solid is a practically important problem. Using continuum models the maximum speed of wetting/dewetting can be found by calculating steady solutions of the governing equations and locating the critical capillary number, Cacrit above which no steady-state solution can be found. Below Cacrit, both stable and unstable steady-state solutions exist and if some appropriate measure of these solutions is plotted against Ca, a fold bifurcation appears where the stable and unstable branches meet. In this talk we develop a computational framework to describe this phenomenon and, by applying ideas from dynamical systems theory to the highly-dimensional complex system, show that, rather than just being a consequence of the fold bifurcation, the unstable solutions are `edge states' and a have profound importance on the transient behaviour of the system. Significantly, the system can become unstable when Cacrit due to finite amplitude interfacial `wobbles' are more dangerous than `stretch' perturbations.

*We acknowledge funding from EPSRC grants EP/N016602/1, EP/P020887/1, EP/S029966/1 and EP/P031684/1. This material is also based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grant no. CBET-1935968. The speaker acknowledges funding from the Leverhulme trust.

Publication: ``Stability and Bifurcation of Dynamic Contact Lines in Two Dimensions'' JFM, 2022, Under revision

Presenters

  • Jack Keeler

    • University of East Anglia

Authors

  • Jack Keeler

    • University of East Anglia
  • Satish Kumar

    • University of Minnesota
  • Duncan Lockerby

    • University of Warwick
  • James E Sprittles

    • Univ of Warwick