Changing the flow profile and resulting drying pattern of dispersion droplets via contact angle modification
Carmen Morcillo Perez, Benjamin D. Goddard, Theo Reid, Schon Fusco,, Miguel A. Rodr\'iguez-Valverde, Marcel Rey, Job H. J. Thijssen

TL;DR
This study explores how modifying surface wettability influences the internal flow and particle deposit patterns of drying droplets, revealing a transition from coffee-ring to central stains as contact angles increase.
Contribution
It provides a systematic experimental and theoretical analysis of how surface wettability affects droplet evaporation dynamics and deposit patterns, advancing understanding in this area.
Findings
Flow shifts from outward to inward with increasing contact angle
Deposit pattern transitions from coffee-ring to central stain
Theoretical model corroborates experimental flow behavior
Abstract
Spilling tea or coffee leads to a tell-tale circular stain after the droplet dries, known as the "coffee ring effect". The evaporation of suspension droplets is a complex physical process, and predicting and controlling the particle deposit patterns from sessile droplet evaporation are essential for many industrial processes, such as ink-jet printing and crop-care applications. In this article, we systematically investigate the effect of surface wettability on the evaporation dynamics of a particle-laden droplet, focussing on the contact line stick-slip behaviour, the hydrodynamic flow of the suspended particles, and the resulting particle deposit after evaporation. We use substrates with different wettabilities, ranging from hydrophilic to hydrophobic, and quantify the internal flow during the evaporation by tracking (fluorescent) tracer particles. We find that the internal flow shifts…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNanomaterials and Printing Technologies · Fluid Dynamics and Thin Films
