Back to Search Start Over

The Natural Breakup Length of a Steady Capillary Jet: Application to Serial Femtosecond Crystallography

Authors :
Alfonso M. Gañán-Calvo
Juraj Knoska
Saša Bajt
Miguel A. Herrada
Henry N. Chapman
Jose M. Lopez-Herrera
Michael Heymann
Max O. Wiedorn
Francisco Cruz-Mazo
Braulio Ganan-Riesco
José María Montanero
Source :
Crystals, Volume 11, Issue 8, Crystals 11(8), 990 (2021). doi:10.3390/cryst11080990 special issue: "Time-resolved crystallography", Crystals, Vol 11, Iss 990, p 990 (2021)

Abstract

Crystals 11(8), 990 (2021). doi:10.3390/cryst11080990 special issue: "Time-resolved crystallography"<br />One of the most successful ways to introduce samples in Serial Femtosecond Crystallography has been the use of microscopic capillary liquid jets produced by gas flow focusing, whose length-to-diameter ratio and velocity are essential to fulfill the requirements of the high pulse rates of current XFELs. In this work, we demonstrate the validity of a classical scaling law with two universal constants to calculate that length as a function of the liquid properties and operating conditions. These constants are determined by fitting the scaling law to a large set of experimental and numerical measurements, including previously published data. Both the experimental and numerical jet lengths conform remarkably well to the proposed scaling law. We show that, while a capillary jet is a globally unstable system to linear perturbations above a critical length, its actual and shorter long-term average intact length is determined by the nonlinear perturbations coming from the jet breakup itself. Therefore, this length is determined solely by the properties of the liquid, the average velocity of the liquid and the flow rate expelled. This confirms the very early observations from Smith and Moss 1917, Proc R Soc Lond A Math Phys Eng, 93, 373, to McCarthy and Molloy 1974, Chem Eng J, 7, 1, among others, while it contrasts with the classical conception of temporal stability that attributes the natural breakup length to the jet birth conditions in the ejector or small interactions with the environment.<br />Published by MDPI, Basel

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734352
Volume :
11
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Crystals
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9637a735352a76a6e02c5a3e771224a4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst11080990