Abstract
An experimental study was done to identify parameters that determine the shape of splats formed by droplets of paraffin wax impacting and freezing on a polished aluminum surface. Impact velocity was varied from 0.5 to 2.7 m/s and surface temperature from 23 to 73 °C. Droplet impact was photographed, and the splat diameter and liquid-solid contact angle measured from photographs. A simple energy conservation model was used to predict the maximum extent of droplet spread and the rate of droplet solidification. The extent of droplet solidification was found to be too small to affect droplet impact dynamics. Photographs showed liquid recoiling in the droplet center following impact on a cold surface (23 °C); the height of recoil diminished if either substrate temperature or impact velocity was increased. Droplet recoil was attributed to surface tension pulling back the periphery of the splat. Reducing the surface temperature increased surface tension, promoting recoil. At sufficiently large impact velocities droplets fragmented. A model based on the Rayleigh-Taylor instability was used to predict the number of satellite droplets that broke loose after impact.
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