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Download fileDroplet Evaporation Dynamics of Low Surface Tension Fluids Using the Steady Method
journal contribution
posted on 2020-11-10, 03:03 authored by A. Alperen Günay, Marisa Gnadt, Soumyadip Sett, Hamed Vahabi, Arun K. Kota, Nenad MiljkovicDroplet
evaporation governs many heat- and mass-transfer processes germane
in nature and industry. In the past 3 centuries, transient techniques
have been developed to characterize the evaporation of sessile droplets.
These methods have difficulty in reconciling transient effects induced
by the droplet shape and size changes during evaporation. Furthermore,
investigation of evaporation of microdroplets residing on wetting
substrates, or fluids having low surface tensions (<30 mN/m), is
difficult to perform using established approaches. Here, we use the
steady method to study the microdroplet evaporation dynamics of low
surface tension liquids. We start by employing the steady method to
benchmark with water droplets having base radii (20 ≤ Rb ≤ 260 μm), apparent advancing
contact angle (45° ≤ θa,app ≤
162°), surface temperature (30 < Ts < 60 °C), and relative humidity (40% < ϕ < 60%).
Following validation, evaporation of ethanol (≈22 mN/m), hexane
(≈18 mN/m), and dodecane (≈25 mN/m) were studied for
90 ≤ Rb ≤ 400 μm and
10 < Ts < 25 °C. We elucidate
the mechanisms governing the observed behavior using heat and mass
transport scaling analysis during evaporation, demonstrating our steady
technique to be particularly advantageous for microdroplets, where
Marangoni and buoyant forces are negligible. Our work not only elucidates
the droplet evaporation mechanisms of low surface tension liquids
but also demonstrates the steady method as a means to study phase
change processes.
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Keywords
sessile dropletssurface tension liquidswater dropletsLow Surface Tension Fluidssize changesmass transportstudy phase change processesdroplet shapemethoddroplet evaporation mechanismsSteady Method Droplet evaporationmNmass-transfer processesmicrodroplet evaporation dynamicsDroplet Evaporation Dynamics3 centuries