posted on 2024-02-06, 04:13authored byFlorence Gibouin, Dharshana Nalatamby, Pierre Lidon, Yaocihuatl Medina-Gonzalez
Numerous
formulation processes of materials involve a
drying step,
during which evaporation of a solvent from a multicomponent liquid
mixture, often confined in a thin film or in a droplet, leads to concentration
and assembly of nonvolatile compounds. While the basic phenomena ruling
evaporation dynamics are known, precise modeling of practical situations
is hindered by the lack of tools for local and time-resolved mapping
of concentration fields in such confined systems. In this article,
the use of fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy and of fluorescent
molecular rotors is introduced as a versatile, in situ, and quantitative
method to map viscosity and concentration fields in confined, evaporating
liquids. More precisely, the cases of drying of a suspended liquid
film and of a sessile droplet of mixtures of fructose and water are
investigated. Measured viscosity and concentration fields allow characterization
of drying dynamics, in agreement with simple modeling of the evaporation
process.