Periodic phase-separation during meniscus-guided deposition
Ren\'e de Bruijn, Anton A. Darhuber, Jasper J. Michels, Paul, van der Schoot

TL;DR
This study numerically explores how phase separation patterns in meniscus-guided coating of binary fluids depend on coating velocity, revealing a transition from periodic droplet arrays to dispersed droplets driven by hydrodynamic and diffusive transport competition.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking phase separation morphology to coating velocity and transport length scales, applicable to various coating and demixing processes.
Findings
Transition from droplet arrays to dispersed droplets with increasing velocity
Critical velocity determined by ratio of spinodal and depletion lengths
Deposition wavelength proportional to solute depletion length
Abstract
We numerically investigate the meniscus-guided coating of a binary fluid mixture containing a solute and a volatile solvent that phase separates via spinodal decomposition. Motivation is the evaporation-driven deposition of material during the fabrication of organic thin film electronics. We find a transition in the phase-separation morphology from an array of droplet-shaped domains deposited periodically parallel to the slot opening to isotropically dispersed solute-rich droplets with increasing coating velocity. This transition originates from the competition between the hydrodynamic injection of the solution into the film and diffusive transport that cannot keep up with replenishing the depletion of solute near the solute-rich domains. The critical velocity separating the two regimes and the characteristic length scale of the phase-separated morphologies are determined by the ratio…
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Taxonomy
Topicsnanoparticles nucleation surface interactions · Advanced Materials Characterization Techniques
