thermocapillary
Thermocapillary, or the thermal Marangoni effect, describes fluid motion driven by gradients in surface tension across a liquid interface caused by temperature variations. The effect arises at liquid–gas or liquid–liquid boundaries and is prominent when interfacial forces dominate viscous forces, such as in thin films, droplets, and microfluidic channels.
Surface tension of most liquids decreases with increasing temperature. A lateral temperature gradient along an interface
Governing descriptions often use the Marangoni number Ma, which relates interfacial tension forces to viscous and
Applications and occurrences include droplet microfluidics (pumping and mixing without external pumps), coating flows and thin-film