Understanding the underlying physical mechanisms behind any phenomenon, particularly our method, turns out critical to better exploit all its features. In this period, as part of the contemplated Contingency Plan, we have mainly focused on addressing theoretical and numerical aspects of our micromixing arrangement. In particular, it is of specific interest for our method to approach the interfacial dynamics of liquid entities and their topological transformation, particularly liquid jets. The split of a fluid filament into droplets inherently entails crossing tiny scales, eventually reaching the characteristic interface's thickness and then the continuum limit. However, we realized that there is no attention to the interface’s nature in the literature of pinch-off of liquid jets and only infinitely narrow models for the interface are assumed. Indeed, it is not found an interfacial model even at those tiny scales at which bulk fluctuations might emerge and become dominant. Essentially, we filled this gap and discovered how the deterministic, non-symmetric, self-similar inertia-viscous-capillary fragmentation can talk with a new symmetric set of self-similar breakup profiles that we found by adding a finite-thickness interface modeling. Symmetry within the breakup is crucial for obtaining clean and smooth fragmentation into mother drops without daughter satellite droplets. These theoretical features open a window to scaling down the periodic generation of droplets, which is linked to our mixing arrangement and can widen its possibilities and even produce much faster mixing than expected initially.
Published research articles:
1. The Natural Breakup Length of a Steady Capillary Jet: Application to Serial Femtosecond Crystallography. Crystals 2021, 11(8), 990. Authors: Gañán-Calvo, A. M., et al.
2. Pinch-off of liquid jets at the finite scale of an interface. Phys. Rev. Fluids 7, L012201. Authors: F. Cruz-Mazo & H. A. Stone
Comments: this paper is currently under embargo until Jan. 18th 2023. Unfortunately, we did realize after acceptance that we did not have enough budget to afford. We will be happy to pay the open-access fees and mitigate this problem once the oncoming regional project is finally granted. In any case, EU acknowledgment is visible in the article and compliant with the grant agreement.
Future research articles directly related to this action:
3. “Submicronsized periodic droplet trains”. Authors: F. Cruz-Mazo & A. M. Gañán-Calvo.
4. “Unconditional liquid jets”. Authors: A. M. Gañán-Calvo, F. Cruz-Mazo et al.
5. “Viscous-capillary liquid fragmentation and thermal effects”. Authors: F. Cruz-Mazo (H. A. Stone & A. M. Gañán-Calvo will be invited).
6. “Electrohydrodynamic evaporation”. Authors: F. Cruz-Mazo & A. M. Gañán-Calvo.
7. “Evaporative streams”. Authors: F. Cruz-Mazo, A. M. Gañán-Calvo & Gañán-Calvo’s students.
8. “Megahertz pulse trains enable multi-hit serial crystallography experiments at XFELs”. Authors: Holmes, S. et al. (under review)
9. X-MIXING, an electrohydrodynamic disintegration of miscible fluid flows. Authors: F. Cruz-Mazo & A. M. Gañán-Calvo
Press release: local and regional newspapers published that F. Cruz-Mazo is beneficiary of a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Individual Fellowhisp. Social media: Talk on Youtube from the European Researchers’ Night 2021. Website: www.fcruzmazo.xyz. Participation to a Conference: American Physical Society, Division of Fluid Mechanics (2019, 2020). Participation to a Workshop: Challenges in Microfluidic Sample Delivery, European XFEL 2022.. Participation in activities organized jointly with other EU projects: the European Researchers’ Night 2019.