SHAO-YIU HSUHilpert, MarkusMarkusHilpert2018-09-102018-09-102015http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-84940069315&partnerID=MN8TOARShttp://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/393291We experimentally investigated the mobilization process of a partially wetting droplet in a pore doublet model. The process, involving contact line movement, liquid film generation, and interface deformation, has not been fully understood and modeled. In equilibrium, the droplet sat in one of the capillary tubes of the pore doublet, and the contact lines of the droplet were pinned with nonzero contact angles. The droplet was subject to pressure differences that were generated by pumping the continuous liquid into the pore doublet at different flow rates. At low flow rates, the droplet moved with sliding contact lines, and the shapes of the droplet's menisci roughly resembled spherical caps. When the flow rate increased, the velocity of the droplet increased, and the shapes of the liquid-liquid interfaces changed dramatically forming finger-like structures and films. Once films form, the classical Young–Laplace equation, which assumes a spherical interface, is not sufficient to describe droplet mobilization and the corresponding pressure drops. The films ruptured as the droplet moved forward, and a certain amount of droplet liquid was left behind. When the flow rates reached a certain level, the droplet snapped off from the tube wall and rolled while being surrounded by thin films formed by the continuous liquid.Droplet mobilization; Partial wetting; Pore-scale experiment; Visualization[SDGs]SDG11Pore-scale visualization of the mobilization of a partially wetting dropletjournal article10.1016/j.advwatres.2015.08.004