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Dive into the research topics where Krishnaraj Sambath is active.

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Featured researches published by Krishnaraj Sambath.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Universal scaling laws for the disintegration of electrified drops

Robert T. Collins; Krishnaraj Sambath; Michael T. Harris; Osman A. Basaran

Drops subjected to strong electric fields emit charged jets from their pointed tips. The disintegration of such jets into a spray consisting of charged droplets is common to electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, printing and coating processes, and raindrops in thunderclouds. Currently, there exist conflicting theories and measurements on the size and charge of these small electrospray droplets. We use theory and simulation to show that conductivity can be tuned to yield three scaling regimes for droplet radius and charge, a finding missed by previous studies. The amount of charge that electrospray droplets carry determines whether they are coulombically stable and charged below the Rayleigh limit of stability or are unstable and hence prone to further explosions once they are formed. Previous experiments reported droplet charge values ranging from 10% to in excess of . Simulations unequivocally show that electrospray droplets are coulombically stable at the instant they are created and that there exists a universal scaling law for droplet charge, .


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Plethora of transitions during breakup of liquid filaments

Jose Rafael Castrejon-Pita; A. A. Castrejón-Pita; Sumeet Thete; Krishnaraj Sambath; Im Hutchings; John Hinch; John R. Lister; Osman A. Basaran

Significance Fluid flows, governed by nonlinear equations, permit formation of singularities. Often, singularities are artifacts of neglecting physical effects. However, free-surface flows exhibit observable singularities including filament pinch-off. As filaments thin, slightly (highly) viscous filaments are expected from theory to transition from an inertial (viscous) regime where viscosity (density) is negligible to an inertial–viscous regime where viscous and inertial effects are important. Previous works show this transition either does not occur or occurs for filament radii well below theoretical predictions. We demonstrate that thinning filaments unexpectedly pass through a number of intermediate transient regimes, thereby delaying onset of the final regime. The findings raise the question if similar dynamical transitions arise in problems that are not necessarily hydrodynamic in nature. Thinning and breakup of liquid filaments are central to dripping of leaky faucets, inkjet drop formation, and raindrop fragmentation. As the filament radius decreases, curvature and capillary pressure, both inversely proportional to radius, increase and fluid is expelled with increasing velocity from the neck. As the neck radius vanishes, the governing equations become singular and the filament breaks. In slightly viscous liquids, thinning initially occurs in an inertial regime where inertial and capillary forces balance. By contrast, in highly viscous liquids, initial thinning occurs in a viscous regime where viscous and capillary forces balance. As the filament thins, viscous forces in the former case and inertial forces in the latter become important, and theory shows that the filament approaches breakup in the final inertial–viscous regime where all three forces balance. However, previous simulations and experiments reveal that transition from an initial to the final regime either occurs at a value of filament radius well below that predicted by theory or is not observed. Here, we perform new simulations and experiments, and show that a thinning filament unexpectedly passes through a number of intermediate transient regimes, thereby delaying onset of the inertial–viscous regime. The new findings have practical implications regarding formation of undesirable satellite droplets and also raise the question as to whether similar dynamical transitions arise in other free-surface flows such as coalescence that also exhibit singularities.


Aiche Journal | 2014

Electrohydrostatics of capillary switches

Krishnaraj Sambath; Osman A. Basaran


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

The fate of electrospray drops

Osman A. Basaran; Robert T. Collins; Krishnaraj Sambath; Michael T. Harris


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Coalescence of Bubbles

Christopher Anthony; Sumeet Thete; Krishnaraj Sambath; Osman A. Basaran


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Coalescence of surfactant covered drops

Sumeet Thete; Krishnaraj Sambath; Osman A. Basaran


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Analysis of scaling during pinch-off of Newtonian filaments by numerical simulation

Sumeet Thete; Krishnaraj Sambath; Osman A. Basaran; Rafael Castrej{ 'o}n-Pita; Alfonso Castrej{ 'o}n-Pita; Im Hutchings; John Hinch; John R. Lister


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Scaling transitions during the thinning of viscous dripping droplets

A. A. Castrejón-Pita; J. Rafael Castrejón-Pita; Sumeet Thete; Krishnaraj Sambath; E. John Hinch; Im Hutchings; John R. Lister; Osman A. Basaran


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Magnetic actuation of immersed coupled droplets: Experiments and simulations

Joseph D. Olles; Amir Hirsa; Krishnaraj Sambath; Osman A. Basaran


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Collision and coalescence of liquid drops in a dynamically active ambient fluid

Krishnaraj Sambath; Hariprasad J. Subramani; Osman A. Basaran

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Robert T. Collins

Pennsylvania State University

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Im Hutchings

University of Cambridge

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John Hinch

University of Cambridge

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