Theoretical study on the interfacial instability of a spherical droplet subject to vertical vibration

Interfacial instability would be aroused on a spherical liquid droplet when it is subject to external vertical vibration. In this paper, a linear analysis was conducted on this instability problem. The polar-angle dependent acceleration in the spherical coordinate is strongly coupled with the tempor...

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Published inPhysics of fluids (1994) Vol. 36; no. 1
Main Authors Li, Yikai, Zhu, Ming, Wu, Kun, Liu, Dehua, Xi, Ru
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Melville American Institute of Physics 01.01.2024
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ISSN1070-6631
1089-7666
DOI10.1063/5.0187412

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Summary:Interfacial instability would be aroused on a spherical liquid droplet when it is subject to external vertical vibration. In this paper, a linear analysis was conducted on this instability problem. The polar-angle dependent acceleration in the spherical coordinate is strongly coupled with the temporal and spatial component of the surface deformation displacement, which gives a recursion equation that implicitly expresses the dispersion relation between the growth rate and the spherical mode numbers. The unstable regions (or unstable tongues) for the inviscid fluids considering the latitudinal mode (longitudinal mode number m = 0) were derived and presented in the parameter space. Compared to the solution of the spherical Faraday instability under radial vibration acceleration, the regions of harmonic unstable tongues for the mono-directional vibration cases become much narrower, and the subharmonic unstable tongues almost approach straight lines. The analysis shows that the latitudinal waves emerging on the spherical droplet surface ought to oscillate harmonically instead of subharmonically, which is opposite to the results for the case under radial vibration acceleration. A corresponding experiment of a liquid droplet lying on a vertically vibrating plate was conducted, and the observations substantiate our theoretical predictions.
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ISSN:1070-6631
1089-7666
DOI:10.1063/5.0187412