Electro wetting of liquid marbles

The focus of this project is to design an experimental platform to perform electrowetting on liquid marbles and to characterise any reaction that the liquid marble may experience. An experimental setup was to be designed and produced to be able to perform the electrowetting process on the liquid ma...

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Main Author: Chan, Yu Fung.
Other Authors: Nguyen Nam-Trung
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46043
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-460432023-03-04T19:36:58Z Electro wetting of liquid marbles Chan, Yu Fung. Nguyen Nam-Trung School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering::Fluid mechanics The focus of this project is to design an experimental platform to perform electrowetting on liquid marbles and to characterise any reaction that the liquid marble may experience. An experimental setup was to be designed and produced to be able to perform the electrowetting process on the liquid marble. Several design considerations had to be taken into account during the fabrication of the setup, namely stability, freedom of motion as well as safety. The design of the base plate and slide holder, went through numerous changes before its final design, the pedestal had to be isolated from the extension arm and its mount so as to achieve its freedom to move in 3 axes without affecting the pedestal and the slide. The extension arm also had to be rigid and non-conducting so as to prevent accidental shorting of the DC source as the voltage application is very high. The mount had to be securely fastened down to the base plate so as to maximize the stability of the whole setup. Experiments were carried out by forming liquid marbles using 3 different liquids, deionised water, an electrolyte (saline solution) and nanofluid. The liquid marbles were made with volumes ranging from 1 µl to 9 µl. The marbles were then placed on a conducting surface, in this case Indium-Tin Oxide coated glass slide, and an electrode was gently inserted into the liquid marble and a voltage was applied. The voltage application started from 50 volts and the voltage was raised in 10volt increments. The marble’s reactions were observed and recorded at each 10volt increment, until the marble experiences a breakdown. A trend was observed that as the volume of marble increases, the breakdown voltage of the marble also increased, with the different fluids exhibiting different breakdown voltages for the same given volume. The marble also experienced violent ejection of some its powder shell particles in some instances. Future works can involve AC voltage sources to test the effect of various frequencies on the electrowetting effect. Bachelor of Engineering (Mechanical Engineering) 2011-06-28T04:22:23Z 2011-06-28T04:22:23Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46043 en Nanyang Technological University 86 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering::Fluid mechanics
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering::Fluid mechanics
Chan, Yu Fung.
Electro wetting of liquid marbles
description The focus of this project is to design an experimental platform to perform electrowetting on liquid marbles and to characterise any reaction that the liquid marble may experience. An experimental setup was to be designed and produced to be able to perform the electrowetting process on the liquid marble. Several design considerations had to be taken into account during the fabrication of the setup, namely stability, freedom of motion as well as safety. The design of the base plate and slide holder, went through numerous changes before its final design, the pedestal had to be isolated from the extension arm and its mount so as to achieve its freedom to move in 3 axes without affecting the pedestal and the slide. The extension arm also had to be rigid and non-conducting so as to prevent accidental shorting of the DC source as the voltage application is very high. The mount had to be securely fastened down to the base plate so as to maximize the stability of the whole setup. Experiments were carried out by forming liquid marbles using 3 different liquids, deionised water, an electrolyte (saline solution) and nanofluid. The liquid marbles were made with volumes ranging from 1 µl to 9 µl. The marbles were then placed on a conducting surface, in this case Indium-Tin Oxide coated glass slide, and an electrode was gently inserted into the liquid marble and a voltage was applied. The voltage application started from 50 volts and the voltage was raised in 10volt increments. The marble’s reactions were observed and recorded at each 10volt increment, until the marble experiences a breakdown. A trend was observed that as the volume of marble increases, the breakdown voltage of the marble also increased, with the different fluids exhibiting different breakdown voltages for the same given volume. The marble also experienced violent ejection of some its powder shell particles in some instances. Future works can involve AC voltage sources to test the effect of various frequencies on the electrowetting effect.
author2 Nguyen Nam-Trung
author_facet Nguyen Nam-Trung
Chan, Yu Fung.
format Final Year Project
author Chan, Yu Fung.
author_sort Chan, Yu Fung.
title Electro wetting of liquid marbles
title_short Electro wetting of liquid marbles
title_full Electro wetting of liquid marbles
title_fullStr Electro wetting of liquid marbles
title_full_unstemmed Electro wetting of liquid marbles
title_sort electro wetting of liquid marbles
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46043
_version_ 1759856954782515200