Diffuse interface (D.I.) model for muliphase flows.- Phase
separation of viscous ternary liquid mixtures.- Dewetting and
decomposing films of simple and complex liquids.- Phase-field
models.
Multiphase flows are typically described assuming that the
different phases are separated by a sharp interface, with
appropriate boundary conditions. This approach breaks down whenever
the lengthscale of the phenomenon that is being studied is
comparable with the real interface thickness, as it happens, for
example, in the coalescence and breakup of bubbles and drops, the
wetting and dewetting of solid surfaces and, in general, im
micro-devices. The diffuse interface model resolves these problems
by assuming that all quantities can vary continuously, so that
interfaces have a non-zero thickness, i.e. they are "diffuse." The
contributions in this book review the theory and describe some
relevant applications of the diffuse interface model for
one-component, two-phase fluids and for liquid binary mixtures, to
model multiphase flows in confined geometries.
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