‘Triple Leidenfrost effect’ seen in dissimilar drops in a hot pan- Times Of Nation
A small team of researchers from Benemérita Universidad and Universidad de las Américas Puebla, in Mexico and Université de Poitiers, in France, has found a “triple Leidenfrost effect” in dissimilar drops in a hot pan. In their paper published in the journal Physical Review Letters, the group describes a type of “bouncing” they observed with different types of drops hovering over a hot surface.
Prior research has shown that the reason drops of water zip around in a hot pan, is because water at the bottom of the drops is vaporized—thus, the drops hover like air-hockey pucks. This phenomenon has come to be known as the Leidenfrost effect. In this new effort, the researchers have found another drop behavior associated with the Leidenfrost effect.
The work involved dropping two types of liquid onto a hot surface and then tilting the surface to force the drops to run into each other. They wanted to know if the two drops would merge. Instead they found that sometimes one of the drops would start bouncing off of the other.
Over several trials, the researchers tried several liquids- water, ethanol, methanol, isopropanol, acetone, hexane, chloroform, acetonitrile, toluene and formamide. They found that sometimes the two drops mixed right away, while sometimes they did not. After much trial and error, they found differences in properties of the two drops and their relative size to one another. Two drops of water, for example, because they have identical properties, merge right away. A drop of ethanol and a drop of water, on the other hand, have very different properties. When a small drop of ethanol was placed next to a large drop of water, the smaller drop bounced off of the larger drop several times before they merged.
The researchers found that the bouncing was due to the difference in boiling point and evaporation speeds of the two substances. They found that there was a Leidenfrost effect happening between the two drops—the hotter drop worked as a hot surface for the cooler drop; its vapor pushed the cooler drop away. They have labeled this phenomenon as a “triple Leidenfrost effect.”
Leidenfrost effect drops found to be self-propelled
F. Pacheco-Vázquez et al, Triple Leidenfrost Effect- Preventing Coalescence of Drops on a Hot Plate, Physical Review Letters (2021). DOI- 10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.204501 . Arxiv- arxiv.org/abs/2107.00438
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‘Triple Leidenfrost effect’ seen in dissimilar drops in a hot pan (2021, November 19)
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