Viscoelasticity and Kinetics of Wetting on Rubber

Abstract
The kinetics of spreading of a liquid drop is usually controlled by conversion of capillary potential energy into viscous dissipation within the liquid when the solid is rigid. However, if the solid is soft, a “wetting ridge” near the solid/liquid/vapour triple line can also be a dissipative sink as the wetting front moves. As a consequence, the kinetics of wetting of rubber may be controlled essentially by viscoelastic losses in the polymer rather than by viscous losses in the liquid drops. Therefore, a direct analogy between the kinetics of wetting and adhesion, respectively, for a liquid and a solid on an elastomeric substrate has been recently proposed. In this paper, the superposition of viscoelastic braking and moderate rubber swelling in the drop spreading phenomenon is considered.

This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit: