Modeling Fluid Film Surface Tension
At the interface between a fluid film and the gas phase, surface tension is caused by the greater attraction of fluid molecules to each other than to the gas molecules. The net effect is an inward force at the interface that causes the fluid film to behave as if its surface were covered with a stretched elastic membrane: that is, the surface is under tension. This tension is expressed using the experimentally determined surface tension coefficient .
The magnitude of the surface tension between a given fluid and a given gas depends on the nature of the fluid and gas that are in contact and on the temperature. The surface tension coefficient is defined for each phase interaction.
To model surface tension in a fluid film simulation:
- Set up a simulation and activate the Fluid Film model.
- Set up a Film-Physics Continuum phase interaction connecting the Film phase with the physics continuum, and activate the Surface Tension model.
- Set the minimum film thickness and the appropriate tuning parameters.
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Specify the surface tension contact angle at each wall boundary in the fluid film shell region.
See Boundary Settings.