The movement of the triple contact line plays a crucial role in many applications such as ink-jet printing, liquid coating and drainage (imbibition) in porous media. To design accurate computational tools for these applications, predictive models of the moving contact line are needed. However, the basic mechanisms responsible for movement of the triple contact line are not well understood but still debated. We investigate the movement of the contact line between water, vapour and a silica-like solid surface under steady conditions in low capillary number regime. We use molecular dynamics (MD) with an atomistic water model to simulate a nanoscopic drop between two moving plates. We include hydrogen bonding between the water molecules and the...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The motion of the three-phase contact line between two immiscible fluids and a solid surface arises ...
The motion of the three-phase contact line between two immiscible fluids and a solid surface arises ...
We use molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to investigate the dynamic wetting of nanoscale water dro...
By removing the smearing effect of capillary waves in molecular dynamics simulations we are able to ...
The molecular structure of moving contact lines (MCLs) and the emergence of a corresponding macrosco...
In this paper, a multiscale moving contact line (MMCL) theory is presented and employed to simulate ...
We report molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the dynamic wetting of nanoscale droplets on moving...
Although the contact angle between a liquid /vapor interface and a flat homogeneous solid at equilib...
Although the contact angle between a liquid /vapor interface and a flat homogeneous solid at equilib...
Although the contact angle between a liquid /vapor interface and a flat homogeneous solid at equilib...
Although the contact angle between a liquid /vapor interface and a flat homogeneous solid at equilib...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The motion of the three-phase contact line between two immiscible fluids and a solid surface arises ...
The motion of the three-phase contact line between two immiscible fluids and a solid surface arises ...
We use molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to investigate the dynamic wetting of nanoscale water dro...
By removing the smearing effect of capillary waves in molecular dynamics simulations we are able to ...
The molecular structure of moving contact lines (MCLs) and the emergence of a corresponding macrosco...
In this paper, a multiscale moving contact line (MMCL) theory is presented and employed to simulate ...
We report molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the dynamic wetting of nanoscale droplets on moving...
Although the contact angle between a liquid /vapor interface and a flat homogeneous solid at equilib...
Although the contact angle between a liquid /vapor interface and a flat homogeneous solid at equilib...
Although the contact angle between a liquid /vapor interface and a flat homogeneous solid at equilib...
Although the contact angle between a liquid /vapor interface and a flat homogeneous solid at equilib...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...
The problem of the moving contact line between two immiscible fluids on a smooth surface is revisite...