Snap evaporation of droplets on smooth topographies

ORAL

Abstract

The evaporation of droplets on solid surfaces is important for a broad range of applications, including ink-jet printing, surface cooling, and micro-structure assembly. Despite its apparent simplicity, the precise configuration of an evaporating droplet on a solid surface has proven notoriously diffcult to predict and control. This is because droplet evaporation typically proceeds as a `stick-slip' sequence, which is a combination of pinning and de-pinning events, caused by microscopic structure of the solid surface. In this talk we show how smooth, pinning-free, solid surfaces of non-planar topography give rise to a different process which we dub snap evaporation. During snap evaporation the morphology of an evaporating droplet follows a reproducible sequence of steps, where the liquid-gas interface is quasi-statically reduced by mass diffusion until it undergoes an out-of-equilibrium snap. Experimentally, we demonstrate this process using, as a model system, a water droplet evaporating on a wavy ultra-smooth lubricant-infused surface. Mathematically, we use full hydrodynamics lattice-Boltzmann simulations, and a model based on bifurcation theory that reveals the points where snap events are triggered, which obey a strict hierarchy dictated by the underlying surface topography.

Presenters

  • Marc Pradas

    School of Mathematics and Statistics, The Open University, Mathematics and Statistics, Open University

Authors

  • Marc Pradas

    School of Mathematics and Statistics, The Open University, Mathematics and Statistics, Open University

  • Gary Wells

    Smart Materials and Surfaces Laboratory, Northumbria University

  • Elfego Ruiz-Gutierrez

    Smart Materials and Surfaces Laboratory, Northumbria University

  • Rodrigo Ledesma-Aguilar

    Smart Materials and Surfaces Laboratory, Northumbria University