How the interplay of molecular and colloidal scales controls drying of microgel dispersions.
Kevin RogerJérôme J CrassousPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Bringing an aqueous dispersion or solution into open air leads to water evaporation. The resulting drying process initiates the buildup of spatial heterogeneities, as nonvolatile solutes and colloids concentrate. Such composition gradients associate with mesostructure gradients, which, in turn, impact flows within these multicomponent systems. In this work, we investigate the drying of microgel dispersions in respect to two reference systems, a colloidal dispersion and a polymer solution, which, respectively, involve colloidal and molecular length scales. We evidence an intermediate behavior in which a film forms at the air/liquid interface and is clearly separated from bulk by a sharp drying front. However, complex composition and mesostructure gradients develop throughout the drying film, as evidenced by Raman and small-angle X-ray scattering mapping. We show that this results from the soft colloidal structure of microgel, which allows them to interpenetrate, deform, and deswell. As a result, water activity and water transport are drastically decreased in the vicinity of the air/liquid interface. This notably leads to diffusional drying kinetics that are nearly independent on the air relative humidity. The interplay between water fraction, water activity, and mesostructure on water transport is generic and, thus, shown to be pivotal in order to master evaporation in drying complex fluids.