Physicists surprised to find that in specially coated tubes, the more viscous a liquid is, the faster it flows
From: Aalto University
October 16, 2020 -- It’s widely known
that thick, viscous liquids – like honey – flow more slowly than low-viscosity
liquids, like water. Researchers were surprised to find this behaviour flipped
on its head when the liquids flow through chemically coated capillaries. In fact,
through these specially coated tubes, liquids a thousand times more viscous
flow ten times faster.
The speed at which different fluids flow
through pipes is important for a large range of applications: from industrial
processes such as oil refineries to biological systems like the human heart.
Traditionally, if you need to make a fluid flow faster through a pipe, you
increase the pressure on it. This technique, however, has its limits; there is
only so much pressure you can put into a pipe before you run the risk of
bursting it. This is especially true for thin and narrow pipes, like the ones
used in microfluidics for producing medicine and other complex chemicals, so
researchers are investigating if they can increase the speed at which liquids
flow through narrow tubes without having to increase the pressure.
In the paper published
on 16 October in the journal Science Advances, researchers
found that by coating the inside of the pipes with compounds that repel
liquids, they could make viscous liquids flow faster than those with low
viscosity.
‘A superhydrophobic surface consists of
tiny bumps that traps air within the coating, so that a liquid droplet that
rests on the surface sits as if on a cushion of air,’ explains Professor Robin Ras, whose research
team at Aalto University’s Department of Applied Physics has made a range of
interesting discoveries in the area of extremely water repellent coatings,
including recent papers in Science and Nature.
Superhydrophobic coatings themselves
don’t speed up the flow of the more viscous liquids. If you place a drop of
honey and a drop of water on a superhydrophobic coated surface and then tilt
the surface so gravity makes the droplets move, the low-viscosity water will
flow down faster.
But when a droplet is confined to one of
the very narrow tubes used in microfluidics, things change drastically. In this
system, the superhydrophobic coating on the walls of the tube creates a small
air gap between the inside wall of the tube and the outside of the droplet.
‘What we found was that when a droplet is confined to a sealed superhydrophobic
capillary, the air gap around the droplet is larger for more viscous liquids.
This larger air gap is what allowed for the viscous fluids to move through the
tube faster than the less viscous ones when flowing due to gravity,’ says
Dr Maja Vuckovac, the first author of the paper.
The size of the effect is quite
substantial. Droplets of glycerol a thousand times more viscous than water flow
through the tube more than ten times faster than water droplets. The
researchers filmed the droplets as they moved through the tube, tracking not
only how fast the liquid moved through the tube, but also how the liquid flowed
inside the droplet. For viscous liquids, the liquid inside the droplet hardly
moved around at all, whereas a fast mixing motion was detected in the lower
viscosity droplets.
‘The crucial discovery is that the
less-viscous liquids also managed to penetrate a bit into the air cushion
surrounding the droplets, rendering a thinner air gap around these. This means
that the air beneath a low-viscosity droplet in the tube couldn’t move out of
the way as fast as for a more viscous droplet with a thicker air gap. With less
air managing to squeeze past the low-viscosity droplets, these were forced to
move down the tube with a slower speed than their more viscous counterparts,’
explains Dr Matilda Backholm, one of the researchers on the
project.
The team developed a fluid dynamics
model that can be used to predict how droplets would move in tubes coated with
different superhydrophobic coatings. They hope that further work on these
systems could have significant applications for microfluidics, a type of
chemical engineering technique that is used to precisely control liquids in
small quantities and in manufacturing complex chemicals like medicines. By
being able to predict how the coatings can be used to modify fluid flow, the
coatings may be helpful for engineers developing new microfluidics systems.
https://www.aalto.fi/en/news/when-honey-flows-faster-than-water
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