Abstract

The evaporation of pentane, hexane, and water drops from a horizontal heating surface is studied experimentally. The temperature at which the drops take a completely spherical shape correlates with limit superheat temperatures under quasi-static conditions, suggesting dynamic burnout. Fluctuations in transient regimes are measured by optical and resistive methods. It is found that the spectral densities of the fluctuation intensity are of a flicker nature. Such behavior is associated with percolation in a set of nonequilibrium phase transitions.

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