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Cavity dynamics after the injection of a microfluidic jet onto capillary bridges

The ballistics of solid and liquid objects (projectiles) impacting on liquids and soft solids (targets) generally results in the creation and expansion of an air cavity inside the impacted object. The dynamics of cavity expansion and collapse depends on the projectile inertia as well as on the targe...

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Autores principales: Quetzeri-Santiago, Miguel A., Fernandez Rivas, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9811641/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36511786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sm01285e
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author Quetzeri-Santiago, Miguel A.
Fernandez Rivas, David
author_facet Quetzeri-Santiago, Miguel A.
Fernandez Rivas, David
author_sort Quetzeri-Santiago, Miguel A.
collection PubMed
description The ballistics of solid and liquid objects (projectiles) impacting on liquids and soft solids (targets) generally results in the creation and expansion of an air cavity inside the impacted object. The dynamics of cavity expansion and collapse depends on the projectile inertia as well as on the target properties. In this paper we study the impact of microfluidic jets generated by thermocavitation processes on a capillary bridge between two parallel planar walls. Different capillary bridge types were studied, Newtonian liquids, viscoelastic liquids and agarose gels. Thus, we compare the cavity formation and collapse between a wide range of material properties. Moreover, we model the critical impact velocity of a jet traversing a capillary bridge type. For agarose gels with a storage modulus of 176 Pa, the critical velocity is well predicted by the model used for liquids. However, the predicted critical velocity for liquids deviates for agarose gels with a storage modulus of 536 Pa and 3961 Pa. Additionally, we show different types of cavity collapse, depending on the Weber number and the capillary bridge properties. We conclude that the type of collapse determines the number and size of entrained bubbles. Furthermore, we study the effects of wettability on the adhesion forces and contact line dissipation. We also conclude that upon cavity collapse, for hydrophobic walls a Worthington jet is energetically favourable. In contrast, for hydrophilic walls, the contact line dissipation is in the same order of magnitude of the energy of the impacted jet, suppressing the Worthington jet formation. Our results provide strategies for preventing bubble entrapment and give an estimation of the cavity dynamics, of relevance for, among others, needle-free injection applications.
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spelling pubmed-98116412023-01-20 Cavity dynamics after the injection of a microfluidic jet onto capillary bridges Quetzeri-Santiago, Miguel A. Fernandez Rivas, David Soft Matter Chemistry The ballistics of solid and liquid objects (projectiles) impacting on liquids and soft solids (targets) generally results in the creation and expansion of an air cavity inside the impacted object. The dynamics of cavity expansion and collapse depends on the projectile inertia as well as on the target properties. In this paper we study the impact of microfluidic jets generated by thermocavitation processes on a capillary bridge between two parallel planar walls. Different capillary bridge types were studied, Newtonian liquids, viscoelastic liquids and agarose gels. Thus, we compare the cavity formation and collapse between a wide range of material properties. Moreover, we model the critical impact velocity of a jet traversing a capillary bridge type. For agarose gels with a storage modulus of 176 Pa, the critical velocity is well predicted by the model used for liquids. However, the predicted critical velocity for liquids deviates for agarose gels with a storage modulus of 536 Pa and 3961 Pa. Additionally, we show different types of cavity collapse, depending on the Weber number and the capillary bridge properties. We conclude that the type of collapse determines the number and size of entrained bubbles. Furthermore, we study the effects of wettability on the adhesion forces and contact line dissipation. We also conclude that upon cavity collapse, for hydrophobic walls a Worthington jet is energetically favourable. In contrast, for hydrophilic walls, the contact line dissipation is in the same order of magnitude of the energy of the impacted jet, suppressing the Worthington jet formation. Our results provide strategies for preventing bubble entrapment and give an estimation of the cavity dynamics, of relevance for, among others, needle-free injection applications. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9811641/ /pubmed/36511786 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sm01285e Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Quetzeri-Santiago, Miguel A.
Fernandez Rivas, David
Cavity dynamics after the injection of a microfluidic jet onto capillary bridges
title Cavity dynamics after the injection of a microfluidic jet onto capillary bridges
title_full Cavity dynamics after the injection of a microfluidic jet onto capillary bridges
title_fullStr Cavity dynamics after the injection of a microfluidic jet onto capillary bridges
title_full_unstemmed Cavity dynamics after the injection of a microfluidic jet onto capillary bridges
title_short Cavity dynamics after the injection of a microfluidic jet onto capillary bridges
title_sort cavity dynamics after the injection of a microfluidic jet onto capillary bridges
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9811641/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36511786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sm01285e
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