Two-component self-contracted droplets: long-range attraction and confinement effects
Adrien Benusiglio, Nate Cira, Anna Wei Lai, Manu Prakash

TL;DR
This paper investigates the behavior of self-contracted droplets formed by two liquids, modeling their attraction dynamics and effects of confinement, revealing enhanced interaction range and motion control in confined geometries.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive model of attraction dynamics and demonstrates how confinement significantly extends interaction range and droplet lifetime.
Findings
Droplets exhibit self-induced motion towards vapor boundaries.
Confinement extends the attraction range and modifies droplet dynamics.
External humidity gradients can drive droplet movement in confined spaces.
Abstract
Marangoni self-contracted droplets are formed by a mixture of two liquids, one of larger surface tension and larger evaporation rate than the other. Due to evaporation, the droplets contract to a stable contact angle instead of spreading on a wetting substrate. This gives them unique properties, including absence of pinning force and ability to move under vapor gradients, self- and externally imposed. We first model the dynamics of attraction in an unconfined geometry and then study the effects of confinement on the attraction range and dynamics, going from minimal confinement (vertical boundary), to medium confinement (2-D vapor diffusion) and eventually strong confinement (1-D). "Self-induced" motion is observed when single droplets are placed close to a vapor boundary toward which they are attracted, the boundary acting as an image droplet with respect to itself. When two droplets…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface Modification and Superhydrophobicity · Nanomaterials and Printing Technologies · Electrowetting and Microfluidic Technologies
