Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4993517 International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer 2017 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A sequential multiscale strategy combining molecular dynamics with volume of fluid simulations is proposed to study dynamic wetting.•A slip model based on molecular kinetic theory is proposed to capture the large slip behavious in the contact line region.

A sequential multiscale strategy that combines molecular dynamics (MD) with volume of fluid (VOF) simulations is proposed to study the spreading of droplets on surfaces. In this hybrid MD/VOF approach, VOF is applied everywhere in the domain with MD pre-simulations distributed along the wetted interface providing the crucial boundary information for the three-phase contact-line dynamics and the solid/liquid interfacial slip. For the latter, molecular shear flow simulations of the liquid in contact with the substrate are used to measure the local slip length to calibrate the Navier slip model. For the contact-line we use MD simulations of nanodroplets spreading on the substrate to calibrate the molecular kinetic theory (MKT) model for both the dynamic contact angle and the slip velocity. We validate this multiscale model for water nanodroplets spreading over a platinum surface by comparing our sequential hybrid simulations with the equivalent dynamics in a full MD treatment. We demonstrate that for nanodroplets spreading on surfaces, applying a dynamic contact angle model is not sufficient to pick up the molecular effects; we need to account for slip across the entire solid/liquid interface, in particular the large slip behaviour at the contact-line. We also demonstrate the application of this multiscale method to larger nanodroplets (up to ∼100 nm diameters), where full MD simulation would be computationally intractable. We find that as the droplet size increases, the slip in the contact line region becomes less important. To simulate the full range of nano to macro droplets, an improved way of dealing with the VOF method is needed to reduce the overall number of grid points.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
, , ,