Capillary Leveling of a Free-Standing Film

ORAL

Abstract

Capillary leveling has previously been used as a sensitive probe for nano-rheology in supported films. Using atomic force microscopy, we have observed the surface tension driven leveling of a step in viscous free-standing polystyrene films. We find that the step evolves to a self-similar profile with a width that scales with the square root of time. Film mobility is found to depend linearly on the film thickness. The scaling is fundamentally different from the capillary leveling observed in supported films (Poiseuille flow) because there is no shear of the fluid at the free surfaces (plug flow). The results agree with the lubrication approximation of Stokes equation with two shear-free boundaries. Free-standing capillary leveling provides a new tool to study glassy dynamics and molecular confinement in a free-standing geometry, as well as strong slip dynamics in the idealized limit of plug flow.

Authors

  • Mark Ilton

    Department of Physics \& Astronomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

  • Miles Couchman

    Department of Physics \& Astronomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

  • Michael Benzaquen

    PCT Lab, UMR CNRS 7083 Gulliver, ESPCI ParisTech, PSL Research University, Paris, France

  • Thomas Salez

    PCT Lab, UMR CNRS 7083 Gulliver, ESPCI ParisTech, PSL Research University, Paris, France

  • Paul Fowler

    Department of Physics \& Astronomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

  • Elie Rapha\"el

    PCT Lab, UMR CNRS 7083 Gulliver, ESPCI ParisTech, PSL Research University, Paris, France, UMR CNRS 7083 Gulliver, ESPCI ParisTech, PSL Research University, UMR CNRS 7083 Gulliver, ESPCI ParisTech

  • Kari Dalnoki-Veress

    McMaster University, Dept. of Physics \& Astronomy, Hamilton, ON, Canada, Department of Physics \& Astronomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, McMaster University