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1.
Langmuir ; 36(40): 11829-11835, 2020 Oct 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921058

ABSTRACT

Spreading of liquid droplets on wettability-confined paths has attracted considerable attention in the past decade. On the other hand, the inverse scenario of a gas bubble spreading on a submerged, wettability-confined track has rarely been studied. In the present work, an experimental investigation of the spreading of millimetric gas bubbles on horizontally submerged, textured, wettability-confined tracks is carried out. The width of the track is kept fixed along its entire length, and the spreading behavior of a gas bubble, dispensed at one end of the track, is studied. The effects of varying track width, bubble diameter, and ambient liquid are investigated. Post-contact, the gas bubble spreads along the track at a linear rate with time, while remaining pinned at its back end; the recorded spreading speed is O(0.5 m/s). An inertio-capillary force balance describes the experimentally observed spreading dynamics with excellent agreement.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(15): 18046-18055, 2020 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32191833

ABSTRACT

The interaction of rising gas bubbles with submerged air-repelling or air-attracting surfaces is relevant to various technological applications that rely on gas-microvolume handling or removal. This work demonstrates how submerged metal meshes with super air-attracting/repelling properties can be employed to manipulate microvolumes of air, rising buoyantly in the form of bubbles in water. Superaerophobic meshes are observed to selectively allow the passage of air bubbles depending on the mesh pore size, the bubble volume-equivalent diameter, and the bubble impact velocity on the mesh. On the other hand, superaerophilic meshes reduce or amplify the volume captured from a train of incoming bubbles. Finally, a spatial wettability pattern on the mesh is used to control the size of the outgoing bubble, and an empirical relation is formulated to predict the released gas volume. The study demonstrates how porous materials with controlled wettability can be used to precisely modulate and control the outcome of bubble/mesh interactions.

3.
Langmuir ; 35(39): 12711-12721, 2019 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31499000

ABSTRACT

The impact of liquid droplets on permeable substrates is important for a number of applications, such as fog collection, liquid atomization, and interaction of liquids with filters and textiles. When a water droplet impacts a wettable mesh, it penetrates the mesh easily with a part of the liquid remaining pinned. On the other hand, when striking a superhydrophobic mesh, part of the water droplet may penetrate and detach from the parent droplet, depending upon the impact velocity and the relative length scales of the droplet and the mesh. In most cases, the remaining droplet would rebound from the top of the superhydrophobic mesh. In this work, we study the impact of a water droplet on a wettability-patterned mesh, with the droplet centrally impacting the wettability-contrast line between the superhydrophobic and superhydrophilic semi-infinite domains. Half of the droplet seeing the superhydrophobic domain responds to it in a fashion that differs from the half hitting the superhydrophilic mesh side. This creates a wide range of post-impact scenarios, depending on the impact conditions and the relative characteristics of the droplet and the mesh. The difference in mesh wettability leads to a net unbalanced surface-tension force that makes the droplet rebound with a horizontal momentum component directed from the non-wettable to the wettable side. Some part of the droplet may even detach during such directional rebounding (i.e., vectoring). Along with the experimental results, a simplified analytical model is presented, which differentiates the cases of detachment or no detachment during vectoring.

4.
Langmuir ; 34(5): 1899-1907, 2018 02 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29323498

ABSTRACT

Spontaneous pumpless transport of droplets on wettability-confined tracks is important for various applications, such as rapid transport and mixing of fluid droplets, enhanced dropwise condensation, biomedical devices, and so forth. Recent studies have shown that on an open surface, a superhydrophilic track of diverging width, laid on a superhydrophobic background, facilitates the transport of water from the narrower end to the wider end at unprecedented rates (up to 40 cm/s) without external actuation. The spreading behavior on such surfaces, however, has only been characterized for water. Keeping in mind that such designs play a key role for a diverse range of applications, such as handling organic liquids and in point-of-care devices, the importance of characterizing the spreading behavior of viscous liquids on such surfaces cannot be overemphasized. In the present work, the spreading behavior on the aforementioned wettability-patterned diverging tracks was observed for fluids of different viscosities. Two dimensionless variables were identified, and a comprehensive relationship was obtained. Three distinct temporal regimes of droplet spreading were established: I), a Washburn-type slow spreading, II) a much faster Laplace pressure-driven spreading, and III), a sluggish density-augmented Tanner-type film spreading. The results offer design guidance for tracks that can pumplessly manage fluids of various viscosities and surface tensions.

5.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 10(5): 5038-5049, 2018 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29304279

ABSTRACT

Liquid jet impingement on porous materials is particularly important in many applications of heat transfer, filtration, or in incontinence products. Generally, it is desired that the liquid not penetrate the substrate at or near the point of jet impact, but rather be distributed over a wider area before reaching the back side. A facile wettability-patterning technique is presented, whereby a water jet impinging orthogonally on a wettability-patterned nonwoven substrate is distributed on the top surface and through the porous matrix, and ultimately dispensed from prespecified points underneath the sample. A systematic approach is adopted to identify the optimum design that allows for a uniform distribution of the liquid on horizontally mounted substrates of ∼50 cm2 area, with minimal or no spilling over the sample edges at jet flow rates exceeding 1 L/min. The effect of the location of jet impingement on liquid distribution is also studied, and the design is observed to perform well even under offset jet impact conditions.

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