4.6 Article

Modulation of the Coffee-Ring Effect in Particle/Surfactant Mixtures: the Importance of Particle-Interface Interactions

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 31, Issue 14, Pages 4113-4120

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b00453

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [European Community] [258782, 624806]
  2. Mairie de Paris
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [258782] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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We study the effect of surfactants on the deposits formed after the evaporation of colloidal suspension drops, at initial concentrations lower than the critical micellar concentrations, for various particle/surfactant mixtures. We show that the surfactant-mediated interactions between particles and the liquid-gas (LG) and liquid-solid (LS) interfaces, rather than the flow patterns, primarily define the morphology of the dry deposit in a robust and reproducible manner. For like-charged particle/surfactant mixtures, most of the particles form a ring-shaped deposit (according to the so-called Coffee-Ring Effect), but some particles can also be deposited inside the ring in a way that is modulated by electrostatic interactions between the particles and the LS interface. For oppositely charged systems, surfactant adsorption to the particle surface strongly affects particle-LG interface interactions, which in turn control the deposition pattern. For low surfactant concentrations, coffee-rings are systematically observed. For intermediate concentrations, the charge of surfactant-decorated particles becomes nearly neutral, and their hydrophobicity is enhanced, which promotes particle trapping at the LG interface. A particle skin is formed and its deposition upon drying leads to homogeneous disk-like patterns. For high surfactant concentrations, particle charge is reversed, and coffee-rings are observed again. Notably, this ring-disk-ring evolution of the deposition behavior as a function of surfactant concentration is observed in a variety of mixtures, regardless of particle absolute charge and surface chemistry as well as of surfactant charge and hydrophobicity. Its apparent universal character makes it a promising strategy for a robust control of particle deposition from evaporating drops.

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