Abstract

We present an experimental investigation of electrohydrodynamic (EHD) flows within a neutrally buoyant drop with a radius of 2.25 mm. Utilizing particle image velocimetry and high-speed shadowgraphy, we measure the internal circulation and reported velocity profiles in the bulk and at the interface of the drop. Two leaky dielectric liquids, silicone and castor oils, are employed as the drop and as the external phase, allowing the analysis of two shape configurations: oblate and prolate. The strength of the applied uniform electric field (from 0.125 to 1.75 kV/cm) enables the analysis covering both the small-deformation limit (CaE≪1) and drops with larger deformations. Our measurements show good agreement with the leaky dielectric model (LDM) for the small-deformation cases. The flows begin at the interface as a result of jump in the electric stresses, leading then to four counter-rotating vortices inside the drop. At a permanent regime, the analytical solutions adequately predict the radial and tangential velocity components within the drop. However, a nuanced behavior is noticed for larger deformations, where the LDM theory underpredicts the internal circulation. Moreover, due to the increased deformation, a non-uniform azimuthal profile is observed for the velocity at the interface, vθ. Transient measurements of this velocity component enlighten the dynamic response of the EHD flows of the drop. Following the available analytical solutions, the dynamic response is governed by the timescale of the deformation of the drop, τdef=μa/γ. We propose a critical value of CaE≈0.1 below which the LDM adequately describes the velocity field in both quasi steady-state and transitory regimes.

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