Spontaneous liquid marble formation on packed porous beds

Date

2012

Authors

Whitby, C.P.
Bian, X.
Sedev, R.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Soft Matter, 2012; 8(44):11336-11342

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

The encapsulation of aqueous and organic solvents with particles used to form liquid marbles implies there are attractive interactions between the particles and those different liquids. This is often masked, however, by the impact of the droplet kinetic energy on marble formation. We investigated droplet wetting and evaporation when drops were gently placed (without rolling or shaking) on beds of silanised glass beads. Particle coating of the drop surface occurred within seconds of liquid contact with the particle bed. This ruled out evaporation from causing the particles to appear to rise up the surface of the drop as it was reduced in volume. Particles attach to the fresh liquid surface created during the droplet oscillations immediately after contact. The further ordered advance of the particles over the drop surface and the close-packed arrangement of the particles revealed the role of capillary forces in the coating process. By minimising the kinetic energy of the droplet contact with the particles, we found that maximum particle coating occurs at liquid surface tensions just above the critical wetting tension of the beads.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Data source: Electronic supplementary information (ESI), http://xlink.rsc.org.access.library.unisa.edu.au/?DOI=c2sm26529j

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2012 The Royal Society of Chemistry

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record