The present work is focused on the water drop impact at high impact Weber numbers (up to We=1100) on surfaces with a good (hydrophobic, 100°135° and ??<10°) water repellency. The low wettability has a potential of being an effective parameter in the heat transfer mechanism, especially in cases of two-phase flow heat transfer, and to prevent adhesion of dirt. An Air Flow Accelerated Drop generator is used to investigate the phenomena at high impact Weber numbers. The impacts are recorded to evaluate the outcome of the impact and to study various characteristics of the drop-wall interaction. Drop impacts are studied to evaluate the effect of higher impact velocity on rebound time. It is found that the impact velocity does not have an influence on rebound time. The average rebound time at different impact velocities for the lowest drop diameter (Deq = 0.98 mm) ranges from 2 ms to 4 ms, as a function of the tested surfaces. Then the effect of different drop diameters (Deq = 0.98-1.78 mm), at fixed impact velocity, is studied. The rebound time increases when the diameter of the impacting drops increases. The tested superhydrophobic surfaces (SHS) do not show any upper limit of rebound in the investigated range (up to We =1100), i.e. the rebound is still occurring at the highest impact velocities, while for the hydrophobic surfaces an upper velocity limit exists, but only in a probabilistic manner, i.e. at a given velocity only for a percentage of the impacts a rebound occurs.
Villa, F., Antonini, C., Marengo, M., Roisman, I. (2015). Experimental analysis of high Weber number drop impacts onto super-hydrophobic and hydrophobic surfaces. In Proceedings of the 15th International Heat Transfer Conference, IHTC-15 (pp.5749-5762) [10.1615/IHTC15.nmt.009823].
Experimental analysis of high Weber number drop impacts onto super-hydrophobic and hydrophobic surfaces
Antonini, C;
2015
Abstract
The present work is focused on the water drop impact at high impact Weber numbers (up to We=1100) on surfaces with a good (hydrophobic, 100°135° and ??<10°) water repellency. The low wettability has a potential of being an effective parameter in the heat transfer mechanism, especially in cases of two-phase flow heat transfer, and to prevent adhesion of dirt. An Air Flow Accelerated Drop generator is used to investigate the phenomena at high impact Weber numbers. The impacts are recorded to evaluate the outcome of the impact and to study various characteristics of the drop-wall interaction. Drop impacts are studied to evaluate the effect of higher impact velocity on rebound time. It is found that the impact velocity does not have an influence on rebound time. The average rebound time at different impact velocities for the lowest drop diameter (Deq = 0.98 mm) ranges from 2 ms to 4 ms, as a function of the tested surfaces. Then the effect of different drop diameters (Deq = 0.98-1.78 mm), at fixed impact velocity, is studied. The rebound time increases when the diameter of the impacting drops increases. The tested superhydrophobic surfaces (SHS) do not show any upper limit of rebound in the investigated range (up to We =1100), i.e. the rebound is still occurring at the highest impact velocities, while for the hydrophobic surfaces an upper velocity limit exists, but only in a probabilistic manner, i.e. at a given velocity only for a percentage of the impacts a rebound occurs.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
ihtc_2014_paper_final_submitted_v9.pdf
Solo gestori archivio
Tipologia di allegato:
Publisher’s Version (Version of Record, VoR)
Dimensione
1.26 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.26 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.