»ã±¨±êÌâ (Title)£ºRigorous Modeling of Droplet Impact Dynamics on Micro-Structured Surfaces: Nonlocal Theory and SPH Simulation of Pancake Bouncing
»ã±¨±êÌâ (ÖÐÎÄ)£ºÒºµÎײ»÷΢½á¹¹±í±í¶¯Á¦Ñ§µÄÑϸñ½¨Ä££º±¡±ý×´µ¯ÌøµÄ·Ç²¿ÃÅÀíÂÛÓëSPH·ÂÕÕ
»ã±¨ÈË (Speaker)£ºÇÇÖлª ½²Ï¯½ÌÊÚ£¨Ïã¸ÛÀí¹¤´óѧ£©
»ã±¨¹¦·ò (Time)£º2025Äê11ÔÂ4ÈÕ(Öܶþ) 14:00
»ã±¨µØÖ· (Place)£º#ÌÚѶ»áÒ飺440-558-257
Ô¼ÇëÈË(Inviter)£ºÀîÐÂÏé
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»ã±¨ÌáÒª£ºIn this work, we formulate a nonlocal mathematical framework for the simulation of 3D pancake bouncing on superhydrophobic micro-cone arrays. The model incorporates intermolecular attractive forces to represent droplet surface tension, and we provide a strict theoretical derivation linking these forces quantitatively to the macroscopic surface tension coefficient, thereby circumventing the reliance on empirical parameter tuning. The complex geometry of micro-cone arrays introduces fundamental difficulties in defining local normal directions for contact algorithms. To overcome this, we develop a nonlocal contact repulsion force model that governs fluid-solid interactions and ensures numerical stability under high Weber number conditions. Based on this mathematical foundation, we implement the model using smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH), enabling high-precision 3D simulations. Computational experiments, validated against empirical data, confirm the model¡¯s accuracy and robustness, while underscoring the key role of numerical simulation in elucidating droplet-microstructure interactions.