Abstract

The splashing phenomenon associated with the impact of a liquid drop on a liquid pool is investigated in this study using the volume of fluid method. The different outcomes of this phenomena largely depend on the height (/depth) of a liquid pool and the impinging drop velocity. The impingement angle, drop shape, fluid properties, and other non-isothermal effects also play a role, but we have eliminated those dependencies by considering no variation in these parameters. The different phenomena that are observed when a drop impacts a liquid pool are controlled by (i) crater depth and wave-swell (rim of the crater) expansion, (ii) wave-swell retraction followed by crater side retraction, and (iii) crater base retraction. During splashing, a deep crater is produced in the receiving liquid after the drop impact. At its rim, a crown-like cylindrical liquid film is ejected out of the crater. Small droplets are normally shed from this rim. It is seen that the depth of the pool has dramatic effects on the dynamics of the crown formed during splashing. When observed even more comprehensively, the physical attributes of the crown, such as crown height and crown radius, are found to strongly relate to the velocity of the falling drop. Finally, we try to demarcate the regions of splashing with and without the formation of secondary droplets on the regime map of Weber number–dimensionless pool depth.

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