Stood-up drop to measure receding contact angles
Diego D\'iaz, Aman Bhargava, Franziska Walz, Azadeh Sharifi, Sajjad Sumally, R\"udiger Berger, Michael Kappl, Hans-J\"urgen Butt, Detlef Lohse, Thomas Willers, Vatsal Sanjay, and Doris Vollmer

TL;DR
The paper introduces the stood-up drop (SUD) technique as a quick, less user-dependent method to measure receding contact angles, overcoming limitations of traditional goniometry.
Contribution
The study presents the stood-up drop method as an alternative to goniometry, validated through simulations and scaling criteria, applicable to various surface types.
Findings
SUD method closely approximates receding contact angles from goniometry.
It reduces user dependence and avoids needle-induced distortions.
Scaling criteria predict the applicability of the SUD technique.
Abstract
The wetting behavior of drops on natural and industrial surfaces is determined by the advancing and receding contact angles. They are commonly measured by the sessile drop technique, also called goniometry, which doses liquid through a solid needle. Consequently, this method requires substantial drop volumes, long contact times, tends to be user-dependent, and is difficult to automate. Here, we propose the stood-up drop (SUD) technique as an alternative to measure receding contact angles. The method consists of depositing a liquid drop on a surface by a short liquid jet, at which it spreads radially forming a pancake-shaped film. Then the liquid retracts, forming a spherical cap drop shape (stood-up drop). At this quasi-equilibrium state, the contact angle () closely resembles the receding contact angle measured by goniometry. Our method is suitable for a wide variety…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface Modification and Superhydrophobicity · Nanomaterials and Printing Technologies · Electrowetting and Microfluidic Technologies
