Evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet

Sessile nanofluid droplet evaporation is receiving increasing attention lately due to its potential in various applications requiring controlling of the solutes morphology after liquid drying. Despite extensive progress, the understanding still remains elusive about how the deposited morphology is a...

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Main Author: Zhong, Xin
Other Authors: Duan Fei
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69467
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-69467
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institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering
Zhong, Xin
Evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet
description Sessile nanofluid droplet evaporation is receiving increasing attention lately due to its potential in various applications requiring controlling of the solutes morphology after liquid drying. Despite extensive progress, the understanding still remains elusive about how the deposited morphology is affected and produced owing to the numerous interrelated factors of a nanofluid droplet system. I investigate sessile nanofluid droplet drying in respect to the domains of colloidal suspensions, base solutions and solid substrates. In respect to suspensions, the addition of mono graphite nanoparticles is found to reduce the droplet wettability, enhance the contact line pinning effect, and induce a slight spreading at the initial stage of evaporation. By using proper combinations of dual-sized alumina nanoparticles, the heterogeneities of the two single-sized nanoparticle patterns are eliminated, and a uniform mixture pattern is produced. Besides, the mixture pattern assembled by two nanoparticle species either exhibits both the features of the single-species patterns or resembles one of them. In respect to the base solution, we probe the flow paradigms during evaporation from two aspects. One is employing water-ethanol binary droplets to examine the effect of ethanol concentration. The binary droplets display three distinct flow regimes. The relative weighings of Regimes I and II are enhanced and Regime III is shortened upon raising the ethanol component. The ethanol dependent weighings of the three regimes determine the congregation and trajectories of the nanoparticles and thus the final deposition. The other study for base solution is probing the autophobic effect induced by cationic surfactant cetyltrimethylammonium bromide in sessile droplets. For the pure droplet, below the critical micelle concentration of the surfactant, the droplet dominated by the autophobic effect exhibits two distinct phases of depinning: Phase 1 featuring rapid droplet shrinkage, and Phase 2 characterized by slower droplet receding. The velocity of the three-phase contact line in Phase 1 shows a transition as the surfactant concentration increases above 0.042 mM, while such a transition is absent for Phase 2. Besides, the spreading of the sessile droplets as they form before the retraction and the maximum contact angle led by dewetting are found regularly dependent on the surfactant concentration. For graphite nanofluid droplets, the autophobic effect is enhanced upon increasing the nanoparticle concentration. The deposited morphology evolves to a distinct coffee ring with a loading of the surfactant, owing to the surfactant adsorption at the nanoparticles surface and the liquid-solid interface, which repels the nanoparticles from the liquid-vapor and the liquid-solid interfaces. In respect to the solid surface, the substrate temperature was varied to find its role in controlling the flow patterns and the stain morphology. The deposited patterns transforms from a disk-like profile to a dual ring from cooling to heating of the substrate. The droplet on the substrate at low a temperature reveals three primary stages. Stage I features the outward transports of nanoparticles along the liquid-vapor interface near the droplet edge. Meanwhile some nanoparticles deposit on the solid surface with a distance to the contact line. In the central region, nanoparticles are dominated by Brownian motion, so they fluctuate irregularly around their positions. Stage II is characterized by the enhanced outward travellings of the nanoparticles in the bulk, leading to a pronounced coffee ring. Most nanoparticles in Stages I and II are central-concentrated, leaving an annular gap sparsely covered adjacent to the outer ring. In Stage III, the pattern is homogenized by filling the gap of the interior nanoparticles. Upon increasing the substrate temperature, the accompanied flow pattern displays a transition when the substrate is still remained cooler than the atmosphere. It is attributed to the evaporative cooling at the droplet apex counteractive to the applied temperature gradient by substrate cooling. Above the transition temperature, the induced inward Marangoni flow takes place earlier at a higher substrate temperature, and in conjunction with the outward radial flow, a dual ring pattern is formed. Recommended future works comprise the employments of dual-sized fluorescent spheres to examine the size-dependent motion of spheres, textured substrates for distinct droplet dynamics, and the infrared thermographic technique for detecting the temperature profile of droplet free surface.
author2 Duan Fei
author_facet Duan Fei
Zhong, Xin
format Theses and Dissertations
author Zhong, Xin
author_sort Zhong, Xin
title Evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet
title_short Evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet
title_full Evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet
title_fullStr Evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet
title_full_unstemmed Evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet
title_sort evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69467
_version_ 1761781330589253632
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-694672023-03-11T18:00:44Z Evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet Zhong, Xin Duan Fei School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering DRNTU::Engineering Sessile nanofluid droplet evaporation is receiving increasing attention lately due to its potential in various applications requiring controlling of the solutes morphology after liquid drying. Despite extensive progress, the understanding still remains elusive about how the deposited morphology is affected and produced owing to the numerous interrelated factors of a nanofluid droplet system. I investigate sessile nanofluid droplet drying in respect to the domains of colloidal suspensions, base solutions and solid substrates. In respect to suspensions, the addition of mono graphite nanoparticles is found to reduce the droplet wettability, enhance the contact line pinning effect, and induce a slight spreading at the initial stage of evaporation. By using proper combinations of dual-sized alumina nanoparticles, the heterogeneities of the two single-sized nanoparticle patterns are eliminated, and a uniform mixture pattern is produced. Besides, the mixture pattern assembled by two nanoparticle species either exhibits both the features of the single-species patterns or resembles one of them. In respect to the base solution, we probe the flow paradigms during evaporation from two aspects. One is employing water-ethanol binary droplets to examine the effect of ethanol concentration. The binary droplets display three distinct flow regimes. The relative weighings of Regimes I and II are enhanced and Regime III is shortened upon raising the ethanol component. The ethanol dependent weighings of the three regimes determine the congregation and trajectories of the nanoparticles and thus the final deposition. The other study for base solution is probing the autophobic effect induced by cationic surfactant cetyltrimethylammonium bromide in sessile droplets. For the pure droplet, below the critical micelle concentration of the surfactant, the droplet dominated by the autophobic effect exhibits two distinct phases of depinning: Phase 1 featuring rapid droplet shrinkage, and Phase 2 characterized by slower droplet receding. The velocity of the three-phase contact line in Phase 1 shows a transition as the surfactant concentration increases above 0.042 mM, while such a transition is absent for Phase 2. Besides, the spreading of the sessile droplets as they form before the retraction and the maximum contact angle led by dewetting are found regularly dependent on the surfactant concentration. For graphite nanofluid droplets, the autophobic effect is enhanced upon increasing the nanoparticle concentration. The deposited morphology evolves to a distinct coffee ring with a loading of the surfactant, owing to the surfactant adsorption at the nanoparticles surface and the liquid-solid interface, which repels the nanoparticles from the liquid-vapor and the liquid-solid interfaces. In respect to the solid surface, the substrate temperature was varied to find its role in controlling the flow patterns and the stain morphology. The deposited patterns transforms from a disk-like profile to a dual ring from cooling to heating of the substrate. The droplet on the substrate at low a temperature reveals three primary stages. Stage I features the outward transports of nanoparticles along the liquid-vapor interface near the droplet edge. Meanwhile some nanoparticles deposit on the solid surface with a distance to the contact line. In the central region, nanoparticles are dominated by Brownian motion, so they fluctuate irregularly around their positions. Stage II is characterized by the enhanced outward travellings of the nanoparticles in the bulk, leading to a pronounced coffee ring. Most nanoparticles in Stages I and II are central-concentrated, leaving an annular gap sparsely covered adjacent to the outer ring. In Stage III, the pattern is homogenized by filling the gap of the interior nanoparticles. Upon increasing the substrate temperature, the accompanied flow pattern displays a transition when the substrate is still remained cooler than the atmosphere. It is attributed to the evaporative cooling at the droplet apex counteractive to the applied temperature gradient by substrate cooling. Above the transition temperature, the induced inward Marangoni flow takes place earlier at a higher substrate temperature, and in conjunction with the outward radial flow, a dual ring pattern is formed. Recommended future works comprise the employments of dual-sized fluorescent spheres to examine the size-dependent motion of spheres, textured substrates for distinct droplet dynamics, and the infrared thermographic technique for detecting the temperature profile of droplet free surface. Doctor of Philosophy (MAE) 2017-01-24T08:38:50Z 2017-01-24T08:38:50Z 2017 Thesis Zhong, X. (2017). Evaporation of sessile nanofluid droplet. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69467 10.32657/10356/69467 en 152 p. application/pdf