posted on 2018-06-28, 17:33authored byAlican Gençer, Jonas Van Rie, Salvatore Lombardo, Kyongok Kang, Wim Thielemans
One
of the most important aspects in controlling colloidal deposition
is manipulating the homogeneity of the deposit by avoiding the coffee-ring
effect caused by capillary flow inside the droplet during drying.
After our previous work where we achieved homogeneous deposition of
cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) from a colloidal suspension by reinforcing
Marangoni flow over the internal capillary flow (Gençer et
al. Langmuir2017, 33 (1), 228–234), we now set out to reduce the importance of
capillary flow inside a drying droplet by inducing gelation. In this
paper, we discuss the effect of gelation on the deposition pattern
and on the self-assembly of CNCs during droplet drying. CNC films
were obtained by drop casting CNC suspensions containing NaCl and
CaCl2 salts. A mixed methodology using rheological and
depolarized dynamic light scattering was applied to understand the
colloidal behavior of the CNCs. In addition, analysis of the mixture’s
surface tension, viscosity, and yield stress of the suspensions were
used to gain deeper insights into the deposition process. Finally,
the understanding of the gelation behavior in the drying droplet was
used to exert control over the deposit where the coffee-ring deposit
can be converted to a dome-shaped deposit.