Drop rebound is a spectacular event that appears after impact on hydrophobic or superhydrophobic surfaces but can also be induced through the so-called Leidenfrost effect. Here we demonstrate that drop rebound can also originate from another physical phenomenon, the solid substrate sublimation. Through drop impact experiments on a superhydrophobic surfaces, a hot plate, and solid carbon dioxide (commonly known as dry ice), we compare drop rebound based on three different physical mechanisms, which apparently share nothing in common (superhydrophobicity, evaporation, and sublimation), but lead to the same rebound phenomenon in an extremely wide temperature range, from 300 C down to even below -79 C. The formation and unprecedented visualization of an air vortex ring around an impacting drop are also reported.

Antonini, C., Bernagozzi, I., Jung, S., Poulikakos, D., Marengo, M. (2013). Water drops dancing on ice: how sublimation leads to drop rebound. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 111(1), 1-5 [10.1103/PhysRevLett.111.014501].

Water drops dancing on ice: how sublimation leads to drop rebound

Antonini, C;
2013

Abstract

Drop rebound is a spectacular event that appears after impact on hydrophobic or superhydrophobic surfaces but can also be induced through the so-called Leidenfrost effect. Here we demonstrate that drop rebound can also originate from another physical phenomenon, the solid substrate sublimation. Through drop impact experiments on a superhydrophobic surfaces, a hot plate, and solid carbon dioxide (commonly known as dry ice), we compare drop rebound based on three different physical mechanisms, which apparently share nothing in common (superhydrophobicity, evaporation, and sublimation), but lead to the same rebound phenomenon in an extremely wide temperature range, from 300 C down to even below -79 C. The formation and unprecedented visualization of an air vortex ring around an impacting drop are also reported.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Physical mechanism; physical phenomena; solid carbon; solid substrates; super-hydrophobic surfaces; superhydrophobicity; vortex rings; wide temperature ranges, drop levitation, leidenfrost
English
2013
111
1
1
5
reserved
Antonini, C., Bernagozzi, I., Jung, S., Poulikakos, D., Marengo, M. (2013). Water drops dancing on ice: how sublimation leads to drop rebound. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 111(1), 1-5 [10.1103/PhysRevLett.111.014501].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/222245
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