Colloidal Deposits via Capillary Bridge Evaporation and Particle Sorting Thereof.
Gaurav UpadhyayRajneesh BhardwajPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2021)
Evaporating droplets of colloidal suspensions leave behind particle deposits which could be effectively controlled via manipulating the surrounding conditions and particles and liquid properties. While previous studies extensively focused on sessile and pendant droplets, the present work investigates the evaporation dynamics of capillary bridges of colloidal suspensions formed between two parallel plates. We vary the wettability of the plates and the particle size and composition of the colloidal suspensions, keeping the same spacing between the plates. We employ side visualization, optical microscopy, fluorescence microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy and develop computational and theoretical models to collect the data. A computational model based on diffusion-limited evaporation is used to characterize the timescale of the evaporation of the capillary bridge. The model predictions are in good agreement with the present and prior experimental measurements. We discuss about the deposits of monodispersed particle suspension formed by the interplay of pinning of the contact line and evaporation dynamics. Multiple rings on the plates are observed due to the stick-slip motion of the contact line. The larger particles tend to form asymmetric deposits, with most particles concentrated on the bottom plates due to a considerably stronger gravitational pull than the hydrodynamic drag. This deposition is explained by estimating the competing forces on the particles during the evaporation. A regime map is proposed for classifying deposits on the particle size wettability plane. Lastly, we demonstrate size-based particle sorting of bidispersed colloidal suspensions in this framework. We describe two mechanisms: gravity-assisted and geometry-assisted sorting, which can be designed to sort particles efficiently. A regime map depicting the regions of influence of each mechanism is presented.