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Droplets move over viscoelastic substrates by surfing a ridge

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Karpitschka,  Stefan
Group Fluidics in heterogeneous environments, Department of Dynamics of Complex Fluids, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Karpitschka, S., Das, S., van Gorcum, M., Perrin, H., Andreotti, B., & Snoeijer, J. H. (2015). Droplets move over viscoelastic substrates by surfing a ridge. Nature Communications, 6: 7891. doi:10.1038/ncomms8891.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-002D-D5F2-8
Abstract
Liquid drops on soft solids generate strong deformations below the contact line, resulting from a balance of capillary and elastic forces. The movement of these drops may cause strong, potentially singular dissipation in the soft solid. Here we show that a drop on a soft substrate moves by surfing a ridge: the initially flat solid surface is deformed into a sharp ridge whose orientation angle depends on the contact line velocity. We measure this angle for water on a silicone gel and develop a theory based on the substrate rheology. We quantitatively recover the dynamic contact angle and provide a mechanism for stick–slip motion when a drop is forced strongly: the contact line depins and slides down the wetting ridge, forming a new one after a transient. We anticipate that our theory will have implications in problems such as self-organization of cell tissues or the design of capillarity-based microrheometers.