Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Nanoscale surfactant transport: bridging molecular and continuum models

Muhammad Rizwanur Rahman, James P. Ewen, Li Shen, David M. Heyes, Daniele Dini, Edward Smith

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Surfactant transport is central to a diverse range of natural phenomena with numerous practical applications in physics and engineering. Surprisingly, this process remains relatively poorly understood at the molecular scale. Here, we use non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (NEMD) simulations to study the spreading of sodium dodecyl sulphate on a thin film of liquid water. The molecular form of the control volume is extended to a coordinate system moving with the liquid–vapour interface to track surfactant spreading. We use this to compare the NEMD results to the continuum description of surfactant transport on an interface. By including the molecular details in the continuum model, we establish that the transport equation preserves substantial accuracy in capturing the underlying physics. Moreover, the relative importance of the different mechanisms involved in the transport process is identified. Consequently, we derive a novel exact molecular equation for surfactant transport along a deforming surface. Close agreement between the two conceptually different approaches, i.e. NEMD simulations and the numerical solution of the continuum equation, is found as measured by the surfactant concentration profiles, and the time dependence of the so-called spreading length. The current study focuses on a relatively simple specific solvent–surfactant system, and the observed agreement with the continuum model may not arise for more complicated industrially relevant surfactants and anti-foaming agents. In such cases, the continuum approach may fail to predict accompanying phase transitions, which can still be captured through the NEMD framework.</jats:p>
Original languageEnglish
Article numberA18
JournalJournal of Fluid Mechanics
Volume1009
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Apr 2025

Data Availability Statement

Codes to reproduce the data, and the force field parameters are available in: https://github.com/MuhammadRRahman/Nanoscale-Surfactant-Transport.git

Acknowledgements

Authors thank E. Weiand for help in assigning the MARTINI parameters, and C. Corral-Casas, C. Braga and S. Ntioudis for fruitful discussions.

Funding

M.R.R. was supported by Shell, and the Beit Fellowship for Scientific Research. J.P.E. was supported by the Royal Academy of Engineering (RAEng). L.S. thanks EPSRC for a Postdoctoral Fellowship (EP/V005073/1). D.D. acknowledges a Shell/RAEng Research Chair in Complex Engineering Interfaces and EPSRC Established Career Fellowship (EP/N025954/1). The authors are grateful to UK Materials and Molecular Modelling Hub for computational resources funded by EPSRC (EP/T022213/1, EP/W032260/1 and EP/P020194/1).

FundersFunder number
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research CouncilEP/P020194/1, EP/T022213/1, EP/N025954/1, EP/W032260/1, EP/V005073/1

Keywords

  • capillary flows
  • microscale transport
  • thin films

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Condensed Matter Physics
  • Mechanics of Materials
  • Mechanical Engineering
  • Applied Mathematics

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Nanoscale surfactant transport: bridging molecular and continuum models'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this