论文标题
使用拓扑原理的润湿表征
Characterization of wetting using topological principles
论文作者
论文摘要
理解润湿行为的假设对于自然系统和技术应用至关重要。传统的接触角概念是与曲率相关的纯几何措施,通常用于表征系统的润湿状态。可以通过施加平衡热力学来确定Young方程。但是,尚不清楚接触角是否是具有显着复杂性系统的系统的代表性度量。在本文中,我们假设基于高斯 - 桥网定理的拓扑原理可以产生一个强大的措施来表征润湿。 理论和实验我们基于与其他不混溶相的接触施加的流体界面的不足曲率引入了宏观接触角。我们进行了无柄液滴模拟,然后进行多相实验,用于多孔烧结的玻璃和底栖二聚体砂岩,以评估拓扑方法的灵敏度和鲁棒性,并将结果与其他传统方法进行比较。 研究结果我们表明,通过各种分析,提出的拓扑原理与最简单条件下的热力学一致。此外,我们阐明,在足够高的图像分辨率下,提出的拓扑方法和局部接触角度测量是可比的。在较低的分辨率下,提出的方法为基于分辨率的效果提供了更准确的结果。总体而言,所提出的概念开辟了新的途径,以表征复杂系统和理论发展的润湿状态,以研究多相系统。
Hypothesis Understanding wetting behavior is of great importance for natural systems and technological applications. The traditional concept of contact angle, a purely geometrical measure related to curvature, is often used for characterizing the wetting state of a system. It can be determined from Young's equation by applying equilibrium thermodynamics. However, whether contact angle is a representative measure of wetting for systems with significant complexity is unclear. Herein, we hypothesize that topological principles based on the Gauss-Bonnet theorem could yield a robust measure to characterize wetting. Theory and Experiments We introduce a macroscopic contact angle based on the deficit curvature of the fluid interfaces that are imposed by contacts with other immiscible phases. We perform sessile droplet simulations followed by multiphase experiments for porous sintered glass and Bentheimer sandstone to assess the sensitivity and robustness of the topological approach and compare the results to other traditional approaches. Findings We show that the presented topological principle is consistent with thermodynamics under the simplest conditions through a variational analysis. Furthermore, we elucidate that at sufficiently high image resolution the proposed topological approach and local contact angle measurements are comparable. While at lower resolutions, the proposed approach provides more accurate results being robust to resolution-based effects. Overall, the presented concepts open new pathways to characterize the wetting state of complex systems and theoretical developments to study multiphase systems.