pith. sign in

arxiv: 2606.17812 · v1 · pith:X52VHJBVnew · submitted 2026-06-16 · ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn · physics.app-ph· physics.pop-ph

The magneto-Leidenfrost effect in ferrofluid droplets

classification ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn physics.app-phphysics.pop-ph
keywords dropletfieldmagneticdropletsonsetreboundspreadingeffect
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

The dynamic Leidenfrost effect LFE and behaviour of impinging colloidal droplets is strongly influenced by the impact and spreading paradigms. LFE actuated rebound and levitation occurs due to enhanced spreading and near-frictionless recoil over the intervening vapour layer, providing opportunities for external field stimulus aided modulation and control of impact outcomes, and the resulting boiling-LFE behaviour. Magnetic field modulated LFE onset, dynamics and boiling transport of stable aqueous nano Fe2O3 based ferrofluid droplets was studied using high speed imaging. The interplay between magnetic, inertia, and viscocapillary forces on droplet spreading, magneto LFE-driven rebound conditions, residence time, and post-impact regimes was analysed using dimensionless parameters maximum spread factor, Weber number, and magnetic Bond number. We report a purely new phenomenon, namely magneto Leidenfrost effect MLFE, wherein magnetic field induces LFE aided onset of droplet rebound at substrate temperatures Ts below the zero-field dynamic Leidenfrost temperature LFT. The critical for the onset of MLFE decreases with increasing . Increasing the nanoparticle concentration permits the onset even at considerably lower . At elevated Ts , the residence time is noted as dependent. At much higher Ts, increasing promotes formation of radial filamentous structures, leading to complete droplet fragmentation. We also propose a theoretical framework that explains magnetic field driven spreading enhancement and rebound, and predicts of MLFE droplets in agreement with experiments. Our findings provide valuable insights into the novel realm of field dictated LFE, and hold significant implications towards the design of frictionless, rapid colloid droplet transport systems, and targeted droplet manipulation or activation for advanced thermal management.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.