Deposition and alignment of fiber suspensions by dip coating
Deok-Hoon Jeong, Langqi Xing, Michael Ka Ho Lee, Nathan Vani, Alban, Sauret

TL;DR
This study investigates how fiber suspensions are deposited and aligned during dip coating, revealing that fiber diameter primarily controls entrainment and substrate geometry influences fiber orientation.
Contribution
It provides experimental insights into fiber entrainment thresholds and orientation control during dip coating, highlighting the roles of fiber dimensions and substrate shape.
Findings
Entrainment threshold scales with fiber diameter similar to spherical particles.
Fiber length has minor influence on entrainment threshold.
Fibers align along cylindrical rod axis on curved substrates.
Abstract
The dip coating of suspensions made of monodisperse non-Brownian spherical particles dispersed in a Newtonian fluid leads to different coating regimes depending on the ratio of the particle diameter to the thickness of the film entrained on the substrate. In particular, dilute particles dispersed in the liquid are entrained only above a threshold value of film thickness. In the case of anisotropic particles, in particular fibers, the smallest characteristic dimension will control the entrainment of the particle. Furthermore, it is possible to control the orientation of the anisotropic particles depending on the substrate geometry. To test the hypotheses, we performed dip-coating experiments with dilute suspensions of non-Brownian fibers with different length-to-diameter aspect ratios. We characterize the number of fibers entrained on the surface of the substrate as a function of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Surfactants and Colloidal Systems · Proteins in Food Systems
