Tears of Wine
ORAL
Abstract
`Tears of wine' refer to the rows of wine-drops that spontaneously emerge within a glass of strong wine. Evaporation-driven Marangoni flows near the meniscus of water-alcohol mixtures drive liquid upward forming a thin liquid film, and a rim or ridge forms near the moving contact line. Eventually, the rim undergoes an instability forming drops, that roll back into bulk reservoir forming so-called tears or legs of wine. Most studies in literature argue the evaporation of more volatile, lower surface tension component (alcohol) results in a concentration-dependent surface tension gradient that drives the climbing flow within the thin film. Though it is well-known that evaporative cooling can create temperature gradients that could provide an additional contribution to the climbing flows, the role of thermocapillary flows is less well-understood. Furthermore, the patterns, flows and instabilities that occur near the rim, and determine the size and periodicity of tears, are not well-studied. Using experiments and theory, we visualize and analyze the formation and growth of tears of wine. The sliding drops, released from the rim towards the bulk reservoir, show oscillations and a cascade of fascinating flows that are analyzed for the first time.
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Presenters
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Prerana Rathore
University of Illinois at Chicago
Authors
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Prerana Rathore
University of Illinois at Chicago
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Chenxian Xu
University of Illinois at Chicago
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Vivek Sharma
Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Illinois at Chicago