z-logo
Premium
Simulations of a weakly conducting droplet under the influence of an alternating electric field
Author(s) -
Sahu Kirti Chandra,
Tripathi Manoj Kumar,
Chaudhari Jay,
Chakraborty Suman
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
electrophoresis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1522-2683
pISSN - 0173-0835
DOI - 10.1002/elps.202000174
Subject(s) - electric field , electrohydrodynamics , permittivity , alternating current , mechanics , dielectric , physics , direct current , deformation (meteorology) , materials science , condensed matter physics , voltage , composite material , quantum mechanics , optoelectronics
We investigate the electrohydrodynamics of an initially spherical droplet under the influence of an external alternating electric field by conducting axisymmetric numerical simulations using a charge‐conservative volume‐of‐fluid based finite volume flow solver. The mean amplitude of shape oscillations of a droplet subjected to an alternating electric field for leaky dielectric fluids is similar to the steady‐state deformation under an equivalent root mean squared direct electric field for all possible electrical conductivity ratio ( K r ) and permittivity ratio ( S ) of the droplet to the surrounding fluid. In contrast, our simulations for weakly conducting media show that this equivalence between alternating and direct electric fields does not hold forK r ≠ S . Moreover, for a range of parameters, the deformation obtained using the alternating and direct electric fields is qualitatively different, that is, for low K r and high S , the droplet becomes prolate under alternating electric field but deforms to an oblate shape in the case of the equivalent direct electric field. A parametric study is conducted by varying the time period of the applied alternating electric field, the permittivity and the electrical conductivity ratios. It is observed that while increasing K r has a negligible effect on the deformation dynamics of the droplet forK r < S , it enhances the deformation of the droplet whenK r > S for both alternating and direct electric fields. We believe that our results may be of immense consequence in explaining the morphological evolution of droplets in a plethora of scenarios ranging from nature to biology.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here