Dynamics of evaporative colloidal patterning

ORAL

Abstract

Evaporating suspensions of colloidal particles lead to the formation of a variety of patterns, ranging from rings left behind a coffee drop to periodic bands or uniform solid films deposited on a substrate suspended vertically in a container of the colloidal solution. To characterize the transition between different types of patterns, we develop minimal models of the liquid meniscus deformation due to the evaporation and colloidal deposition. A complementary multiphase model allows us to investigate the detailed dynamics of patterning in a drying solvent. This approach couples the inhomogeneous evaporation at the evolving liquid-air interface to the dynamics inside the suspension, i.e. the liquid flow, local variations of the particle concentration, and the propagation of the deposition front where the solute forms a wet, incompressible porous medium at high concentrations. The results of our theory are in good agreement with direct observations.

*This research was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) under Award FA9550-09-1-0669-DOD35CAP and the Kavli Institute for Bionano Science and Technology at Harvard University.

Authors

  • L. Mahadevan

    • School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, USA
    • Harvard
    • Harvard Univ
    • Harvard University, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and Department of Physics
    • Harvard University
    • Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences; Harvard University Department of Physics
  • C. Nadir Kaplan

    • Harvard University
  • Ning Wu

    • Colorado School of Mines
  • Shreyas Mandre

    • Brown University
  • Joanna Aizenberg

    • Harvard University