Pattern formation during the evaporation of a colloidal nanoliter drop: a numerical and experimental study
Rajneesh Bhardwaj, Xiaohua Fang, Daniel Attinger

TL;DR
This study combines numerical modeling and experiments to understand how colloidal nanoliter drops evaporate and form complex particle deposit patterns, such as coffee rings, on solid surfaces.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive finite-element model that captures evaporation dynamics, flow, and deposit formation, validated by experimental observations.
Findings
Flow patterns influence deposit shape (ring or bump).
Numerical results match experimental evaporation times and deposit morphology.
Marangoni effects significantly affect particle distribution.
Abstract
An efficient way to precisely pattern particles on solid surfaces is to dispense and evaporate colloidal drops, as for bioassays. The dried deposits often exhibit complex structures exemplified by the coffee ring pattern, where most particles have accumulated at the periphery of the deposit. In this work, the formation of deposits during the drying of nanoliter colloidal drops on a flat substrate is investigated numerically and experimentally. A finite-element numerical model is developed that solves the Navier-Stokes, heat and mass transport equations in a Lagrangian framework. The diffusion of vapor in the atmosphere is solved numerically, providing an exact boundary condition for the evaporative flux at the droplet-air interface. Laplace stresses and thermal Marangoni stresses are accounted for. The particle concentration is tracked by solving a continuum advection-diffusion…
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