The role of monolayer viscosity in Langmuir film hole closure dynamics
ORAL
Abstract
We re-examine the model proposed by Alexander et al. (Phys. Fluids, vol. 18, 2006, 062103) for the closing of a circular hole in a molecularly thin incompressible Langmuir film situated on a Stokesian subfluid. For simplicity their model assumes that the surface phase is inviscid which leads to the result that the cavity area decreases at a constant rate determined by the ratio of edge tension to subfluid viscosity. We reformulate the problem, allowing for a regularizing monolayer viscosity. The viscosity-dependent corrections to the hole dynamics are analysed and found to be non-trivial, even when the monolayer viscosity is small; these corrections may explain the departure of experimental data from the theoretical prediction when the hole radius becomes comparable to the Saffman–Delbrück length. Through fitting, under these relaxed assumptions, we find the edge tension could be as much as six times larger (∼4.0 pN) than reported previously.
*M.J.S. acknowledges support by the National Science Foundation under awards DMR-1420073 (NYU MRSEC) and DMR-2004469. L.L.J. acknowledges support from the Flatiron Institute, where this research was performed.
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Publication: L. L. Jia, M. J. Shelley. "The role of monolayer viscosity in Langmuir film hole closure dynamics." Journal of Fluid Mechanics 948 (2022) A1.
Presenters
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Leroy Jia
- National Institute of Standards and Technology