Literature DB >> 30702296

Pinning-Free Evaporation of Sessile Droplets of Water from Solid Surfaces.

Steven Armstrong1, Glen McHale1, Rodrigo Ledesma-Aguilar1, Gary G Wells1.   

Abstract

Contact-line pinning is a fundamental limitation to the motion of contact lines of liquids on solid surfaces. When a sessile droplet evaporates, contact-line pinning typically results in either a stick-slip evaporation mode, where the contact line pins and depins from the surface in an uncontrolled manner, or a constant contact-area mode with a pinned contact line. Pinning prevents the observation of the quasi-equilibrium constant contact-angle mode of evaporation, which has never been observed for sessile droplets of water directly resting on a smooth, nontextured, solid surface. Here, we report the evaporation of a sessile droplet from a flat glass substrate treated with a smooth, slippery, omni-phobic covalently attached liquid-like coating. Our characterization of the surfaces shows high contact line mobility with an extremely low contact-angle hysteresis of ∼1° and reveals a step change in the value of the contact angle from 101° to 105° between a relative humidity (RH) of 30 and 40%, in a manner reminiscent of the transition observed in a type V adsorption isotherm. We observe the evaporation of small sessile droplets in a chamber held at a constant temperature, T = (25.0 ± 0.1) °C and at constant RH across the range RH = 10-70%. In all cases, a constant contact-angle mode of evaporation is observed for most of the evaporation time. Furthermore, we analyze the evaporation sequences using the Picknett and Bexon ideal constant contact-angle mode for diffusion-limited evaporation. The resulting estimate for the diffusion coefficient, DE, of water vapor in air of DE = (2.44 ± 0.48) × 10-5 m2 s-1 is accurate to within 2% of the value reported in the literature, thus validating the constant contact-angle mode of the diffusion-limited evaporation model.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 30702296     DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b03849

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  6 in total

1.  Slippery Liquid-Like Solid Surfaces with Promising Antibiofilm Performance under Both Static and Flow Conditions.

Authors:  Yufeng Zhu; Glen McHale; Jack Dawson; Steven Armstrong; Gary Wells; Rui Han; Hongzhong Liu; Waldemar Vollmer; Paul Stoodley; Nicholas Jakubovics; Jinju Chen
Journal:  ACS Appl Mater Interfaces       Date:  2022-01-31       Impact factor: 10.383

2.  Machine learning-enabled feature classification of evaporation-driven multi-scale 3D printing.

Authors:  Samannoy Ghosh; Marshall V Johnson; Rajan Neupane; James Hardin; John Daniel Berrigan; Surya R Kalidindi; Yong Lin Kong
Journal:  Flex Print Electron       Date:  2022-03-01

3.  Sliding Water Droplet on Oil Impregnated Surface and Dust Particle Mitigation.

Authors:  Saeed Bahatab; Bekir Sami Yilbas; Abba Abdulhamid Abubakar; Ghassan Hassan; Anwaruddin Siddiqui Mohammed; Hussain Al-Qahtani; Ahmet Z Sahin; Abdullah Al-Sharafi
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2021-02-03       Impact factor: 4.411

4.  Evaporation and Electrowetting of Sessile Droplets on Slippery Liquid-Like Surfaces and Slippery Liquid-Infused Porous Surfaces (SLIPS).

Authors:  S Armstrong; G McHale; R Ledesma-Aguilar; G G Wells
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2020-09-16       Impact factor: 3.882

5.  Contact-Angle Hysteresis and Contact-Line Friction on Slippery Liquid-like Surfaces.

Authors:  Hernán Barrio-Zhang; Élfego Ruiz-Gutiérrez; Steven Armstrong; Glen McHale; Gary G Wells; Rodrigo Ledesma-Aguilar
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2020-12-01       Impact factor: 3.882

6.  Double-sided slippery liquid-infused porous materials using conformable mesh.

Authors:  Nicasio R Geraldi; Jian H Guan; Linzi E Dodd; Pietro Maiello; Ben B Xu; David Wood; Michael I Newton; Gary G Wells; Glen McHale
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-09-16       Impact factor: 4.379

  6 in total

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