Rayleigh-Taylor instability by segregation in an evaporating multi-component microdroplet
Yaxing Li, Christian Diddens, Tim Segers, Herman Wijshoff, Michel, Versluis, Detlef Lohse

TL;DR
This study reveals that adding silicone oil to a binary droplet induces segregation-driven Rayleigh-Taylor instability, significantly affecting flow dynamics and delaying evaporation through buoyancy effects and altered Marangoni flows.
Contribution
It demonstrates how minute silicone oil addition triggers segregation and buoyancy-driven instabilities, providing a new understanding of evaporation dynamics in multi-component droplets.
Findings
Segregation forms plumes rising from droplet rim.
Buoyancy induces Rayleigh-Taylor instability, affecting flow.
Segregation delays evaporation by hindering contact line evaporation.
Abstract
The evaporation of multi-component droplets is relevant to various applications but challenging to study due to the complex physicochemical dynamics. Recently, Li (2018) reported evaporation-triggered segregation in 1,2-hexanediol-water binary droplets. In this present work, we added 0.5 wt% silicone oil into the 1,2-hexanediol-water binary solution. This minute silicone oil concentration dramatically modifies the evaporation process as it triggers an early extraction of the 1,2-hexanediol from the mixture. Surprisingly, we observe that the segregation of 1,2-hexanediol forms plumes, rising up from the rim of the sessile droplet towards the apex during the droplet evaporation. By orientating the droplet upside down, i.e., by studying a pendant droplet, the absence of the plumes indicates that the flow structure is induced by buoyancy, which drives a Rayleigh-Taylor instability (i.e.,…
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