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Pinning-Free Evaporation of Sessile Droplets of Water from Solid Surfaces.
Armstrong, Steven; McHale, Glen; Ledesma-Aguilar, Rodrigo; Wells, Gary G.
Afiliação
  • Armstrong S; Smart Materials & Surfaces Laboratory, Faculty of Engineering & Environment , Northumbria University , Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST , U.K.
  • McHale G; Smart Materials & Surfaces Laboratory, Faculty of Engineering & Environment , Northumbria University , Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST , U.K.
  • Ledesma-Aguilar R; Smart Materials & Surfaces Laboratory, Faculty of Engineering & Environment , Northumbria University , Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST , U.K.
  • Wells GG; Smart Materials & Surfaces Laboratory, Faculty of Engineering & Environment , Northumbria University , Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST , U.K.
Langmuir ; 35(8): 2989-2996, 2019 Feb 26.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30702296
ABSTRACT
Contact-line pinning is a fundamental limitation to the motion of contact lines of liquids on solid surfaces. When a sessile droplet evaporates, contact-line pinning typically results in either a stick-slip evaporation mode, where the contact line pins and depins from the surface in an uncontrolled manner, or a constant contact-area mode with a pinned contact line. Pinning prevents the observation of the quasi-equilibrium constant contact-angle mode of evaporation, which has never been observed for sessile droplets of water directly resting on a smooth, nontextured, solid surface. Here, we report the evaporation of a sessile droplet from a flat glass substrate treated with a smooth, slippery, omni-phobic covalently attached liquid-like coating. Our characterization of the surfaces shows high contact line mobility with an extremely low contact-angle hysteresis of ∼1° and reveals a step change in the value of the contact angle from 101° to 105° between a relative humidity (RH) of 30 and 40%, in a manner reminiscent of the transition observed in a type V adsorption isotherm. We observe the evaporation of small sessile droplets in a chamber held at a constant temperature, T = (25.0 ± 0.1) °C and at constant RH across the range RH = 10-70%. In all cases, a constant contact-angle mode of evaporation is observed for most of the evaporation time. Furthermore, we analyze the evaporation sequences using the Picknett and Bexon ideal constant contact-angle mode for diffusion-limited evaporation. The resulting estimate for the diffusion coefficient, DE, of water vapor in air of DE = (2.44 ± 0.48) × 10-5 m2 s-1 is accurate to within 2% of the value reported in the literature, thus validating the constant contact-angle mode of the diffusion-limited evaporation model.

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2019 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2019 Tipo de documento: Article