#lamella

2025-05-08

Charged Drops Don’t Splash

When a droplet falls on a surface, it spreads itself horizontally into a thin lamella. Sometimes — depending on factors like viscosity, impact speed, and air pressure — that drop splashes, breaking up along its edge into myriad smaller droplets. But a new study finds that a small electrical charge is enough to suppress a drop’s splash, as seen below.

The drop’s electrical charge builds up along the drop’s surface, providing an attraction that acts somewhat like surface tension. As a result, charged drops don’t lift off the surface as much and they spread less overall; both factors inhibit splashing.* The effect could increase our control of droplets in ink jet printing, allowing for higher resolution printing. (Image and research credit: F. Yu et al.; via APS News)

*Note that this only works for non-conductive surfaces. If the surface is electrically conductive, the charge simply dissipates, allowing the splash to occur as normal.

#dropletImpact #droplets #electricalField #electrohydrodynamics #fluidDynamics #lamella #physics #science #splashes #splashing

Two black and white images of a droplet impacting a surface. On the left, an uncharged droplet splashes. On the right, an electrically charged droplet spreads without splashing.
2025-01-22

⬆️ New #preprint ! ⬆️

#Cells seem to like to keep their proportions. All thru the process of spreading on a substrate, we find conserved ratios in size of #lamella (under which cell #FocalAdhesion patches grow) and cell body. We show that this requires the interplay of some global regulation (based on #mechanical interactions?) with local processes.

Reconstructed (r,z) cell body shapes and lamella growth as a function of time along spreading. The averaged spatial distribution of paxillin intensity along time is shown at the cell-substrate interface.

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