Experimental Study of Droplet Impacts on Inclined Surfaces with Different Wettability at Different Temperatures
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Experimental Study of Droplet Impacts on Inclined Surfaces with Different Wettability at Different Temperatures
Journal of Refrigeration(2025)
作者机构:
河南理工大学机械与动力工程学院,焦作
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Experimental Study of Droplet Impacts on Inclined Surfaces with Different Wettability at Different Temperatures[J/OL]. Journal of Refrigeration, 2025.
DOI:
Experimental Study of Droplet Impacts on Inclined Surfaces with Different Wettability at Different Temperatures[J/OL]. Journal of Refrigeration, 2025.DOI:
Experimental Study of Droplet Impacts on Inclined Surfaces with Different Wettability at Different Temperatures
show certain application prospects in the field of anti-/de-icing. In this paper
the kinetic behaviour of impinging droplets on surfaces with different temperatures (16~-25 °C)
different inclination angles (0~60°) and different wettability (hydrophilic and superhydrophobic surfaces) is investigated through experimental comparisons
and the variations of the droplet morphology
spreading factor
spreading time and contact time are analysed. The results show that the impinging droplets exhibit different kinetic behaviours after spreading due to the different inclination angles and wettability; the maximum spreading factor and spreading time on the hydrophilic surfaces increase with the increase of inclination angle
and the variation of the spreading time on the superhydrophobic surfaces is the same as that of the hydrophilic surfaces
and the maximum spreading factor decreases with the increase of the inclination angle
especially at Ts>-25 ℃; in comparison with the hydrophilic surfaces
the Compared with the hydrophilic surface
the impinging droplets have shorter spreading time on the superhydrophobic surface
which can reach about 10 times at Ts=-25 °C; increasing the wall inclination angle breaks the symmetric bounce of the droplets on the horizontal superhydrophobic surface
which in turn shortens the contact time of the droplets
suggesting that the increase of inclination angle can inhibit the freezing of water droplets effectively.