Thermodynamic lubrication in the elastic Leidenfrost effect

ORAL

Abstract

The elastic Leidenfrost effect occurs when a vaporizable soft solid is lowered onto a hot surface. Evaporative flow couples to elastic deformation, giving spontaneous bouncing or steady-state floating. The effect embodies an unexplored interplay between thermodynamics, elasticity, and lubrication: despite being observed, its basic theoretical description remains a challenge. Here, we provide a theory of elastic Leidenfrost floating. As weight increases, a rigid solid sits closer to the hot surface. By contrast, we discover an elasticity-dominated regime where the heavier the solid, the higher it floats. We show that this elastic regime is characterized by Hertzian behavior of the solid's underbelly and derive how the float height scales with materials parameters. Introducing a dimensionless elastic Leidenfrost number, we capture the crossover between rigid and Hertzian behavior. Our results provide theoretical underpinning for recent experiments, and point to the design of novel soft machines.

*Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) New Investigator Award No. EP/T000961/1

Publication: Jack Binysh, Indrajit Chakraborty, Mykyta V. Chubynsky, Vicente Luis Diaz Melian, Scott R. Waitukaitis, James E. Sprittles, Anton Souslov. Thermodynamic lubrication in the elastic Leidenfrost effect. arXiv:2207.02769 (2022).

Presenters

  • Anton Souslov

    • University of Bath

Authors

  • Jack Binysh

    • University of Bath
  • Indrajit Chakraborty

    • University of Warwick
  • Mykyta Chubynsky

    • University of Warwick
  • Vicente Luis L Diaz Melian

    • IST Austria
  • Scott R Waitukaitis

    • IST Austria
    • Institute of Science and Technology Austria
    • IST austria
    • Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA)
  • James E Sprittles

    • Univ of Warwick
  • Anton Souslov

    • University of Bath