Unsteady wetting of soft solids
Hypothesis: Spreading of liquids on soft solids often occurs intermittently, i.e., the liquid’s wetting front switches between sticking and slipping. Studies of this so-called stick-slip wetting on soft solids mostly are confined within quasi-static or forced spreading conditions. In these situation...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1758102024-05-07T02:03:20Z Unsteady wetting of soft solids Vo, Quoc Mitra, Surjyasish Lin, Marcus Tran, Tuan School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Engineering Wetting Stick-slip Hypothesis: Spreading of liquids on soft solids often occurs intermittently, i.e., the liquid’s wetting front switches between sticking and slipping. Studies of this so-called stick-slip wetting on soft solids mostly are confined within quasi-static or forced spreading conditions. In these situations, because the sticking duration is set much larger than the viscoelastic relaxation time of the solid, a ridge is persistently and fully developed at the wetting front as the soft solid yields to the liquid’s surface tension. The sticking duration and spreading velocity, therefore, were shown to have little impact to the contact angle change required for stick-to-slip transitions. For unsteady wetting of soft solids, a commonly encountered but largely unexplored situation, we hypothesize that the stickto-slip transition is controlled not only by a combination of sticking duration and the spreading velocity, but also by an increasing depinning threshold caused by the growing ridge at the wetting front. Experiment: We performed unsteady wetting experiment on soft solids by letting water droplets spread freely on soft solid surfaces of various stiffness. We capture both the stick-slip spreading behavior and growing wetting ridges using synchronous high-speed imaging and high-speed interferometry. Recorded data of liquid spreading and solid deforming at the wetting front were analyzed to shed light on the relation between stick-slip characteristics and the growing wetting ridge. Findings: We find that intermittent wetting on a soft solid surface results from a competition between three key factors: liquid inertia, capillary force change during sticking, and growing pinning force caused by the solid’s viscoelastic response. We theoretically formulate their quantitative contributions to predict how stick-to-slip transitions occur, i.e., how the contact angle change and sticking duration depend on the liquid’s spreading velocity and the solid’s viscoelastic characteristics. This provides a mechanistic understanding and methods to control unsteady wetting phenomena in diverse applications, from tissue engineering and fabrication of flexible electronics to biomedicine. Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) Ministry of Education (MOE) Nanyang Technological University S.M. is supported by NTU’s Research Scholarship. M.L. is supported by NTU’s Nanyang President Graduate Scholarship. This study is supported by Nanyang Technological University, the Republic of Singapore’s Ministry of Education (MOE, Grant No. MOE2018-T2-2-113), and the RIE2020 Industry Alignment Fund - Industry Collaboration Projects (IAF-ICP) Funding Initiative, as well as cash and in-kind contribution from the industry partner, HP Inc., through the HP-NTU Digital Manufacturing Corporate Lab. 2024-05-07T02:03:19Z 2024-05-07T02:03:19Z 2024 Journal Article Vo, Q., Mitra, S., Lin, M. & Tran, T. (2024). Unsteady wetting of soft solids. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, 664, 478-486. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2024.02.217 0021-9797 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175810 10.1016/j.jcis.2024.02.217 38484516 2-s2.0-85187673203 664 478 486 en MOE2018-T2-2-113 IAF-ICP Journal of Colloid and Interface Science © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. |
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Engineering Wetting Stick-slip Vo, Quoc Mitra, Surjyasish Lin, Marcus Tran, Tuan Unsteady wetting of soft solids |
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Hypothesis: Spreading of liquids on soft solids often occurs intermittently, i.e., the liquid’s wetting front switches between sticking and slipping. Studies of this so-called stick-slip wetting on soft solids mostly are confined within quasi-static or forced spreading conditions. In these situations, because the sticking duration is set much larger than the viscoelastic relaxation time of the solid, a ridge is persistently and fully developed at the wetting front as the soft solid yields to the liquid’s surface tension. The sticking duration and spreading velocity, therefore, were shown to have little impact to the contact angle change required for stick-to-slip transitions. For unsteady wetting of soft solids, a commonly encountered but largely unexplored situation, we hypothesize that the stickto-slip transition is controlled not only by a combination of sticking duration and the spreading velocity, but also by an increasing depinning threshold caused by the growing ridge at the wetting front. Experiment: We performed unsteady wetting experiment on soft solids by letting water droplets spread freely on soft solid surfaces of various stiffness. We capture both the stick-slip spreading behavior and growing wetting ridges using synchronous high-speed imaging and high-speed interferometry. Recorded data of liquid spreading and solid deforming at the wetting front were analyzed to shed light on the relation between stick-slip characteristics and the growing wetting ridge. Findings: We find that intermittent wetting on a soft solid surface results from a competition between three key factors: liquid inertia, capillary force change during sticking, and growing pinning force caused by the solid’s viscoelastic response. We theoretically formulate their quantitative contributions to predict how stick-to-slip transitions occur, i.e., how the contact angle change and sticking duration depend on the liquid’s spreading velocity and the solid’s viscoelastic characteristics. This provides a mechanistic understanding and methods to control unsteady wetting phenomena in diverse applications, from tissue engineering and fabrication of flexible electronics to biomedicine. |
author2 |
School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering |
author_facet |
School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Vo, Quoc Mitra, Surjyasish Lin, Marcus Tran, Tuan |
format |
Article |
author |
Vo, Quoc Mitra, Surjyasish Lin, Marcus Tran, Tuan |
author_sort |
Vo, Quoc |
title |
Unsteady wetting of soft solids |
title_short |
Unsteady wetting of soft solids |
title_full |
Unsteady wetting of soft solids |
title_fullStr |
Unsteady wetting of soft solids |
title_full_unstemmed |
Unsteady wetting of soft solids |
title_sort |
unsteady wetting of soft solids |
publishDate |
2024 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175810 |
_version_ |
1814047022274052096 |