Collapse of a hemicatenoid bounded by a solid wall: instability and dynamics driven by surface Plateau border friction
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Journal Title
Soft Matter
ISSN
1744-683X
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Type
Article
This Version
AM
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Goldstein, R., cox, s., Pesci, A., & Raufaste, C. Collapse of a hemicatenoid bounded by a solid wall: instability and dynamics driven by surface Plateau border friction. Soft Matter https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.85510
Abstract
The collapse of a catenoidal soap film when the rings supporting it are moved beyond a critical
separation is a classic problem in interface motion in which there is a balance between surface
tension and the inertia of the surrounding air, with film viscosity playing only a minor role. Recently
[Goldstein, et al., Phys. Rev. E, 2021, 104, 035105], we introduced a variant of this problem in which
the catenoid is bisected by a glass plate located in a plane of symmetry perpendicular to the rings,
producing two identical hemicatenoids, each with a surface Plateau border (SPB) on the glass plate.
Beyond the critical ring separation, the hemicatenoids collapse in a manner qualitatively similar to the
bulk problem, but their motion is governed by the frictional forces arising from viscous dissipation in
the SPBs. We present numerical studies of a model that includes classical laws in which the frictional
force fv for SPB motion on wet surfaces is of the form f_v ∼Ca^n, where Ca is the capillary number.
Our experimental data on the temporal evolution of this process confirms the expected value n = 2/3
for mobile surfactants and stress-free interfaces. This study can help explain the fragmentation of
bubbles inside very confined geometries such as porous materials or microfluidic devices.
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/M017982/1)
Embargo Lift Date
2025-06-14
Identifiers
This record's DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.85510
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/338101
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