Abstract
The capillary action is a unique feature of micro-grooves with numerous applications. This spontaneous flow eliminates the need for an extra pumping device to deliver a liquid. Capillary action depends on physical properties and features of the solid surface, as well as on thermophysical properties of the liquid. In this study, our previously proposed unifying capillary rise model is extended to include the effect of surface roughness. A new characteristic length scale is proposed that includes salient geometrical parameters, such as micro-grooves height, width, and surface roughness. Furthermore, it is shown that by using the proposed characteristic length scale, it can be determined whether the capillary action would occur in a given micro-groove and liquid. Various metallic and polymeric surfaces with a wide range of surface roughness are fabricated from aluminum, stainless-steel, natural graphite sheet, and 3D-printed stainless-steel and a polymer. A profilometer and sessile drop method are used to measure surface roughness and the contact angles, respectively. The present unifying model is compared against our measured data, and it is shown that it can predict the capillary rise in rough micro-grooves with less than a 10% relative difference. It is observed that the capillary height can be increased for a wetting surface by introducing surface roughness and by using optimal micro-groove cross-sections that are triangular as opposed to rectangular. The proposed compact, unifying model can be used to predict the capillary rise for any given micro-groove cross-section, and as a design tool for numerous industrial and biomedical applications, such as heat pipes, power electronic cooling solutions, sorption systems, medicine delivery devices, and microfluidics that utilize capillary micro-grooves.
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