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The Role of Thermoviscous and Thermocapillary Effects in the Cooling and Gravity-Driven Draining of Molten Free Liquid Films

Alahmadi, Hani; Naire, Shailesh

Authors

Hani Alahmadi



Abstract

We theoretically considered two-dimensional flow in a vertically aligned thick molten liquid film to investigate the competition between cooling and gravity-driven draining, which is relevant in the formation of metallic foams. Molten liquid in films cools as it drains, losing its heat to the surrounding colder air and substrate. We extended our previous model to include non-isothermal effects, resulting in coupled non-linear evolution equations for the film's thickness, extensional flow speed and temperature. The coupling between the flow and cooling effect was via a constitutive relationship for temperature-dependent viscosity and surface tension. This model was parameterized by the heat transfer coefficients at the film-air free surface and film-substrate interface, the Peclet number, the viscosity-temperature coupling parameter and the slope of the linear surface tension-temperature relationship. A systematic exploration of the parameter space revealed that at low Peclet numbers, increasing the heat transfer coefficient and gradually reducing the viscosity with temperature was conducive to cooling and could slow down the draining and thinning of the film. The effect of increasing the slope of the surface tension-temperature relationship on the draining and thinning of the film was observed to be more effective at lower Peclet numbers, where surface tension gradients in the lamella region opposed the gravity-driven flow. At higher Peclet numbers, though, the surface tension gradients tended to enhance the draining flow in the lamella region, resulting in the dramatic thinning of the film in the later stages.

Citation

Alahmadi, H., & Naire, S. (2023). The Role of Thermoviscous and Thermocapillary Effects in the Cooling and Gravity-Driven Draining of Molten Free Liquid Films. Fluids, 8(5), Article 153. https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids8050153

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 5, 2023
Online Publication Date May 14, 2023
Publication Date May 14, 2023
Deposit Date Jun 7, 2023
Journal Fluids
Print ISSN 2311-5521
Publisher MDPI
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 8
Issue 5
Article Number 153
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids8050153
Keywords Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes; Mechanical Engineering; Condensed Matter Physics