A better understanding of dripping can improve inkjet printing and deposition of DNA onto gene chips, among other things. Purdue researchers solved the fundamental Navier–Stokes equations for a single drop from a faucet, then observed dripping with a fast camera to develop a model for simulating sequences of hundreds of drops. Among the team’s observations was period doubling, in which drops can fall at two characteristic intervals (such as 2 s followed by 4 s). Meanwhile, University of Texas researchers have shown how to prevent drips from a ceiling for up to weeks at a time. They found that a vertical heat gradient in the gas beneath the suspended layer of liquid did the trick. Normally, a liquid is gravitationally unstable to variations in thickness along the layer, but because heat reduces a liquid’s surface tension, the warmer, thicker regions are pulled back to the colder regions of higher surface...
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1 February 2001
February 01 2001
Citation
Benjamin P. Stein; Dripping from faucets and ceilings. Physics Today 1 February 2001; 54 (2): 9. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4796256
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