Abstract

For an immiscible oil drop immersed in a stably stratified ethanol–water mixture, a downwards solutal Marangoni flow is generated on the surface of the drop, owing to the concentration gradient, and the resulting propulsion competes against the downwards gravitational acceleration of the heavy drop. In prior work of Li et al. (Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 126, issue 12, 2021, 124502), we found that for drops of low viscosity, an oscillatory instability of the Marangoni flow is triggered once the Marangoni advection is too strong for diffusion to restore the stratified concentration field around the drop. Here we experimentally explore the parameter space of the concentration gradient and drop radius for high oil viscosities and find a different and new mechanism for triggering the oscillatory instability in which diffusion is no longer the limiting factor. For such drops of higher viscosities, the instability is triggered when the gravitational effect is too strong so that the viscous stress cannot maintain a stable Marangoni flow. This leads to a critical drop radius above which the equilibrium is always unstable. Subsequently, a unifying scaling theory that includes both the mechanisms for low and for high viscosities of the oil drops is developed. The transition between the two mechanisms is found to be controlled by two length scales: the drop radius $R$ and the boundary layer thickness $\delta$ of the Marangoni flow around the drop. The instability is dominated by diffusion for $\delta < R$ and by viscosity for $R<\delta$ . The experimental results for various drops of different viscosities can well be described with this unifying scaling theory. Our theoretical description thus provides a unifying view of physicochemical hydrodynamic problems in which the Marangoni stress is competing with a stable stratification.

Highlights

  • Fluids in nature and technology are often multicomponent, with gradients in concentration when out of equilibrium (Lohse & Zhang 2020)

  • The concentration gradients give rise to both density gradients and solutal Marangoni stresses on an interface, leading to the competition between Marangoni convection and gravitational convection driven by density differences

  • In ink-jet printing, where the ink droplets are often multicomponent (Hoath 2016; Lohse 2022); in freezing emulsions (Ghosh & Coupland 2008; Degner et al 2014; Deville 2017; Dedovets, Monteux & Deville 2018), where next to concentration gradients, thermal gradients come into play; and in crystal growth (Chang & Wilcox 1976; Schwabe et al 1978; Chang, Wilcox & Lefever 1979; Chun & Wuest 1979; Schwabe & Scharmann 1979; Schwabe, Scharmann & Preisser 1982; Preisser, Schwabe & Scharmann 1983; Kamotani, Ostrach & Vargas 1984), where the liquid column is subjected to a temperature gradient

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Summary

Introduction

Fluids in nature and technology are often multicomponent, with gradients in concentration when out of equilibrium (Lohse & Zhang 2020). The concentration gradients give rise to both density gradients and solutal Marangoni stresses on an interface, leading to the competition between Marangoni convection and gravitational convection driven by density differences. Flows with such a competition are frequently encountered in technological applications. Edwards et al (2018), Li et al (2019a) and Diddens, Li & Lohse (2021) have recently discovered that gravitational effects can be important in evaporating binary droplets, in spite of the small scale reflected in small Bond numbers. It is important to thoroughly understand the competing effect of gravity and Marangoni forces as some other flows where such a competition occurs may need reconsideration

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