Sweating Liquid Micro-Marbles:
Dropwise Condensation
on Hydrophobic Nanoparticulate Materials
Posted on 2016-02-20 - 08:13
Liquid marbles have opened up several potential applications
including
biochemical batch reaction engineering and gas sensing. To be successful
candidates in these applications, the ability to prepare liquid marbles
of controlled sizes and in a continuous process is crucial. This has
been the missing link in the science leading to these applications.
In the current study, we present a remarkably simple process driven
by condensation on a nanoparticulate matrix to continuously produce
liquid marbles whose mean size can be controlled in the range of diameters
from 3 to 1000 μm, while the distribution width is also controllable
independently. We experimentally demonstrate the physics involved
in this condensation-driven marble formation process using two fluidsglycerol
and ethylene glycolwhich span an order of magnitude in viscosity.
Hydrophobic fumed silica nanoparticulate material is used as the encapsulating
medium owing to its intertwined agglomerate nature. We show that the
primary mechanism causing the formation of liquid marbles is droplet
nucleation followed by growth driven by condensation. Drop coalescence
in dense droplet ensembles is the secondary mechanism, which attempts
to destroy the distribution width controllability. From a physics
perspective, it will be demonstrated that strong coalescence dominated
growth gives rise to a hitherto unreported, significantly higher rate
of growth.
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Bhosale, Prasad
S.; Panchagnula, Mahesh V. (2016). Sweating Liquid Micro-Marbles:
Dropwise Condensation
on Hydrophobic Nanoparticulate Materials. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/la303133y