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Effects of capillary number and flow rates on the hydrodynamics of droplet generation in T-junction microfluidic systems (2105.10308v4)

Published 21 May 2021 in physics.flu-dyn

Abstract: The hydrodynamics of droplets is significant in wide-ranging applications involving immiscible fluids and emulsions in food and pharmaceutical. The control and manipulation of droplets are primarily a function of flow governing and geometrical parameters. The finite element and level set approaches are used in this work to explore the influences of capillary number (Ca) and flow rate ratio (Qr) of dispersed and continuous phases on hydrodynamics of droplet generation in two-phase flow through T-junction cross-flow microfluidic device. A mathematical model based on a mass continuity, Navier-Stokes, and level set equations are solved computationally using the Eulerian framework for Ca = 1e-4 - 1 and Qr =0.1 - 10. Both immiscible phases, having equal density and unequal viscosity, flow (Re=0.1) through equal-sized channels. In particular, instantaneous phase flow field, droplet size, droplet detachment time and generation frequency are presented and discussed as a function of governing parameters (Ca and Qr). Considered parametric space is characterized as squeezing, first transition, dripping, second transition, parallel, and jet flow regimes. In contrast to threshold Ca ~ 0.01 in earlier studies, squeezing regime exists for all Ca and Qr = 2- 10. Flow regimes are also mapped into droplets and non-droplet zones. Threshold interfacial Ca, defining the boundary between droplet and non-droplet zones, scales quadratically with Qr. Droplet dynamics shows a complex dependence on Ca and Qr. Droplet length varies linearly with Qr in squeezing regime whereas power-law variation with Ca and Qr in dripping regime. Droplet frequency shows a power-law function of Ca and Qr in droplet zone. Present results compare excellently with earlier limited experimental and numerical studies. Finally, present results and predictive correlations can guide engineering and design of droplet microfluidics devices.

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