Issue 2, 2025

Droplets sliding on soft solids shed elastocapillary rails

Abstract

The surface tension of partially wetting droplets deforms soft substrates. These deformations are usually localized to a narrow region near the contact line, forming a so-called ‘elastocapillary ridge.’ When a droplet slides along a substrate, the movement of the elastocapillary ridge dissipates energy in the substrate and slows the droplet down. Previous studies have analyzed isotropically spreading droplets and found that the advancing contact line ‘surfs’ the elastocapillary ridge, with a velocity determined by a local balance of capillary forces and bulk rheology. Here, we experimentally explore the dynamics of a droplet sliding across soft substrates. At low velocities, the contact line is nearly circular, and dissipation increases logarithmically with speed. At higher droplet velocities, the contact line adopts a bullet-like shape, and the drag force levels off. At the same time, droplets shed a pair of ‘elastocapillary rails’ that fade away slowly behind them. These results suggest that sliding along the parallel edges of a bullet-shaped droplet dissipates less energy than surfing the wetting ridges at the front and back.

Graphical abstract: Droplets sliding on soft solids shed elastocapillary rails

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Aug 2024
Accepted
28 Nov 2024
First published
03 Dec 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Soft Matter, 2025,21, 209-215

Droplets sliding on soft solids shed elastocapillary rails

N. Xue, L. A. Wilen, R. W. Style and E. R. Dufresne, Soft Matter, 2025, 21, 209 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM01041H

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