Pedro Saenz
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Pedro Saenz.
Physics of Fluids | 2013
Pedro Saenz; Prashant Valluri; Khellil Sefiane; George Karapetsas; Omar K. Matar
A shallow planar layer of liquid bounded from above by gas is set into motion via the thermocapillary effect resulting from a thermal gradient applied along its interface. Depending on the physical properties of the liquid and the strength of the gradient, the system is prone to departure from its equilibrium state and to the consequent development of an oscillatory regime. This problem is numerically investigated for the first time by means of two-phase direct numerical simulations fully taking into account the presence of a deformable interface. Obliquely travelling hydrothermal waves (HTWs), similar to those first described by Smith and Davis [J. Fluid Mech. 132, 119–144 (1983)]10.1017/S0022112083001512, are reported presenting good agreement with linear stability theory and experiments. The nonlinear spatiotemporal growth of the instabilities is discussed extensively along with the final bulk flow for both the liquid and gas phases. Our study reveals the presence of interface deformations which accomp...
Nature Communications | 2017
Pedro Saenz; Alex Wray; Zhizhao Che; Omar K. Matar; Prashant Valluri; Jungho Kim; Khellil Sefiane
The evaporation of a liquid drop on a solid substrate is a remarkably common phenomenon. Yet, the complexity of the underlying mechanisms has constrained previous studies to spherically symmetric configurations. Here we investigate well-defined, non-spherical evaporating drops of pure liquids and binary mixtures. We deduce a universal scaling law for the evaporation rate valid for any shape and demonstrate that more curved regions lead to preferential localized depositions in particle-laden drops. Furthermore, geometry induces well-defined flow structures within the drop that change according to the driving mechanism. In the case of binary mixtures, geometry dictates the spatial segregation of the more volatile component as it is depleted. Our results suggest that the drop geometry can be exploited to prescribe the particle deposition and evaporative dynamics of pure drops and the mixing characteristics of multicomponent drops, which may be of interest to a wide range of industrial and scientific applications.
Physics of Fluids | 2014
Pedro Saenz; Prashant Valluri; Khellil Sefiane; George Karapetsas; Omar K. Matar
This paper investigates the effects of phase change on the stability of a laterally heated liquid layer for the first time. The interface is open to the atmosphere and vapor diffusion is the rate-limiting mechanism for evaporation. In this configuration, the planar layer is naturally vulnerable to the formation of travelling thermal instabilities, i.e., hydrothermal waves (HTWs), due to the presence of temperature gradients along the gas-liquid interface. Recent work carried out for deformable interfaces and negligible evaporation indicates that the HTWs additionally give rise to interface deformations of similar features, i.e., physical waves. The study presented here reveals that phase change plays a dual role through its effect on these instabilities: the latent energy required during the evaporation process tends to inhibit the HTWs while the accompanying level reduction enhances the physical waves by minimizing the role of gravity. The dynamics of the gas phase are also discussed. The HTW-induced convective patterns in the gas along with the travelling nature of the instabilities have a significant impact on the local evaporation flux and the vapor distribution above the interface. Interestingly, high (low) concentrations of vapor are found above cold (hot) spots. The phase-change mechanism for stable layers is also investigated. The Marangoni effect plays a major role in the vapor distribution generating a vacuum effect in the warm region and vapor accumulations at the cold boundary capable of inverting the phase change, i.e., the capillary flow can lead to local condensation. This work also demonstrates the inefficiencies of the traditional phase change models based on pure vapor diffusion to capture the dynamics of thermocapillary flows.
Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2015
Pedro Saenz; Khellil Sefiane; Jungho Kim; Omar K. Matar; Prashant Valluri
Nature Physics | 2017
Pedro Saenz; Tudor Cristea-Platon; John W. M. Bush
Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2016
Giuseppe Pucci; Pedro Saenz; Luiz M. Faria; John W. M. Bush
Physical Review Fluids | 2017
N. Sungar; Lucas Tambasco; Giuseppe Pucci; Pedro Saenz; John W. M. Bush
Chaos | 2018
Tudor Cristea-Platon; Pedro Saenz; John W. M. Bush
Procedia IUTAM | 2015
Pedro Saenz; Prashant Valluri; Khellil Sefiane; Omar K. Matar
Physical Review Fluids | 2018
Pedro Saenz; Giuseppe Pucci; Alexis Goujon; Tudor Cristea-Platon; Jörn Dunkel; John W. M. Bush