Scaling mechanical instabilities in drying micellar droplets. Issue 22 (24th May 2022)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- Scaling mechanical instabilities in drying micellar droplets. Issue 22 (24th May 2022)
- Main Title:
- Scaling mechanical instabilities in drying micellar droplets
- Authors:
- Dewangan, Jayant K
Basu, Nandita
Chowdhury, Mithun - Abstract:
- Abstract : We show that instabilities in drying micellar aqueous droplets generate a rich variety of heterogeneous patterns that scale with the deposited materials' thickness, substrate-dependent-modulus, along with the solution concentration and droplet size. Abstract : Drying-induced mechanical instabilities in aqueous solution droplets occur primarily because, during evaporation, the central liquid minimizes the surface tension by pulling the packed gel-like region, leading to a stretching effect of the liquid region at the receding wet front. Under an appropriate scenario, it finally perturbs the gel-like zone at the droplet periphery, generating cracks, wrinkles, folds, cavities, buckles, etc. Here we report unique wrinkling patterns from evaporating sessile micellar aqueous droplets on rigid and soft substrates kept at temperatures well above the ambient. The wrinkling patterns remarkably vary depending on the material's elastic modulus and substrate, the concentration of the micellar solution ( C CTAB ), and the substrate temperature ( T S ). In the low concentration regime ( C CTAB ≤ 0.0364 wt%), coffee-ring-like morphologies are observed devoid of any wrinkling morphology irrespective of T S and the substrate's elastic modulus. In the high initial concentration regime ( C CTAB ≥ 0.0364 wt%), for droplets deposited at T S ≥ 85 °C, wrinkle formation starts at the droplet peripheral zone, radial on the stiff glass substrate, and annular on the soft cross-linked PDMSAbstract : We show that instabilities in drying micellar aqueous droplets generate a rich variety of heterogeneous patterns that scale with the deposited materials' thickness, substrate-dependent-modulus, along with the solution concentration and droplet size. Abstract : Drying-induced mechanical instabilities in aqueous solution droplets occur primarily because, during evaporation, the central liquid minimizes the surface tension by pulling the packed gel-like region, leading to a stretching effect of the liquid region at the receding wet front. Under an appropriate scenario, it finally perturbs the gel-like zone at the droplet periphery, generating cracks, wrinkles, folds, cavities, buckles, etc. Here we report unique wrinkling patterns from evaporating sessile micellar aqueous droplets on rigid and soft substrates kept at temperatures well above the ambient. The wrinkling patterns remarkably vary depending on the material's elastic modulus and substrate, the concentration of the micellar solution ( C CTAB ), and the substrate temperature ( T S ). In the low concentration regime ( C CTAB ≤ 0.0364 wt%), coffee-ring-like morphologies are observed devoid of any wrinkling morphology irrespective of T S and the substrate's elastic modulus. In the high initial concentration regime ( C CTAB ≥ 0.0364 wt%), for droplets deposited at T S ≥ 85 °C, wrinkle formation starts at the droplet peripheral zone, radial on the stiff glass substrate, and annular on the soft cross-linked PDMS substrate. At C CTAB ≥ 2.73 wt%, radial wrinkles on the glass substrate and annular wrinkles on the cross-linked PDMS substrate nucleate from the edges connecting to the central region of the deposit. The ratio between the width of the gel-like deposit (or wrinkle length) and the droplet's radius scales with the initial concentration of the surfactant and depends on the initial equilibrium contact angle of the micellar droplets. Our results support existing understandings of mechanical instabilities of dried deposits, which satisfies interdependent scaling relationships among their number, lengthscale (dried deposit radius, the wavelength of the wrinkles, and peripheral undulations from Rayleigh–Bénard instability), thickness, and elastic modulus. Interestingly, we found substrate-dependent antagonistic interdependence of the elastic modulus of the dried deposit with the initial surfactant concentration. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Soft matter. Volume 18:Issue 22(2022)
- Journal:
- Soft matter
- Issue:
- Volume 18:Issue 22(2022)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 18, Issue 22 (2022)
- Year:
- 2022
- Volume:
- 18
- Issue:
- 22
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2022-0018-0022-0000
- Page Start:
- 4253
- Page End:
- 4264
- Publication Date:
- 2022-05-24
- Subjects:
- Soft condensed matter -- Periodicals
530.413 - Journal URLs:
- http://www.rsc.org/Publishing/Journals/sm/index.asp ↗
http://www.rsc.org/ ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1039/d2sm00304j ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 1744-683X
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - 8321.419000
British Library DSC - BLDSS-3PM
British Library STI - ELD Digital store - Ingest File:
- 21820.xml