Abstract

When exposed to air, gallium-based alloys rapidly form a thin oxide layer with viscoelasticity and high adhesion. Although previous work demonstrated that an oxide layer inhibits liquid metal droplet rebound, there is still a lack of a quantitative study to elaborate how an oxide layer affects the impact dynamics. To address this issue, we experimentally investigate Galinstan droplet impingement on a superhydrophobic CuO nanoblade surface and physically explain the difference in the dynamic characteristics of oxidized and unoxidized droplets. Experimental results show that the effect of an oxide layer becomes prominent during the retraction phase. The high adhesion significantly suppresses retraction and rebound, while the elastic response prevents a droplet from sufficiently stretching and maintains the stability of the morphology. More importantly, we systematically and quantitatively explore the influence of an oxide layer on several critical impact parameters, which contributes to a comprehensive understanding of the impact dynamics of liquid metal droplets. It is indicated that an oxide layer has little effect on the maximum spreading factor and spreading time, whereas it causes a 45% reduction of the restitution coefficient and a 36% increase in contact time. Notably, the scaling laws that describe the critical impact parameters of unoxidized droplets show good agreement with the ones known from ordinary Newtonian fluids.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call