Abstract

Electrowetting has become a widely used tool for manipulating tiny amounts of liquids on surfaces. This paper proposes an electrowetting lattice Boltzmann method for manipulating micro-nano droplets. The hydrodynamics with the nonideal effect is modeled by the chemical-potential multiphase model, in which the phase transition and equilibrium are directly driven by chemical potential. For electrostatics, droplets in the micro-nano scale cannot be considered as equipotential as macroscopic droplets due to the Debye screening effect. Therefore, we linearly discretize the continuous Poisson-Boltzmann equationin a Cartesian coordinate system, and the electric potential distribution is stabilized by iterative computations. The electric potential distribution of droplets at different scales suggests that the electric field can still penetrate micro-nano droplets even with the screening effect. The accuracy of the numerical method is verified by simulating the static equilibrium of the droplet under the applied voltage, and the results show the apparent contact angles agree very well with the Lippmann-Young equation. The microscopic contact angles present some obvious deviations due to the sharp decrease of electric field strength near the three-phase contact point. These are consistent with previously reported experimental and theoretical analyses. Then, the droplet migrations on different electrode structures are simulated, and the results show that droplet speed can be stabilized more quickly due to the more uniform force on the droplet in the closed symmetric electrode structure. Finally, the electrowetting multiphase model is applied to study the lateral rebound of droplets impacting on the electrically heterogeneous surface. The electrostatic force prevents the droplets from contracting on the side which is applied voltage, resulting in the lateral rebound and transport toward the side.

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