Dynamics of evaporative colloidal patterning
Abstract
Drying suspensions often leave behind complex patterns of particulates, as might be seen in the coffee stains on a table. Here we consider the dynamics of periodic band or uniform solid film formation on a vertical plate suspended partially in a drying colloidal solution. Direct observations allow us to visualize the dynamics of the band and film deposition, and the transition in between when the colloidal concentration is varied. A minimal theory of the liquid meniscus motion along the plate reveals the dynamics of the banding and its transition to the filming as a function of the ratio of deposition and evaporation rates. We also provide a complementary multiphase model of colloids dissolved in the liquid, which couples the inhomogeneous evaporation at the evolving meniscus to the fluid and particulate flows and the transition from a dilute suspension to a porous plug. This allows us to determine the concentration dependence of the bandwidth and the deposition rate. Together, our findings allow for the control of drying-induced patterning as a function of the colloidal concentration and evaporation rate.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1412.1813,
title = {Dynamics of evaporative colloidal patterning},
author = {C. Nadir Kaplan and Ning Wu and Shreyas Mandre and Joanna Aizenberg and L. Mahadevan},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1412.1813},
year = {2014}
}
Comments
11 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables