4.6 Article

Acoustic suppression of the coffee-ring effect

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 11, Issue 36, Pages 7207-7213

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c5sm01196e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/I017887/1 - Proxomics, EP/K027611/1]
  2. ERC [340117 - Biophononics]
  3. Lord Kelvin and Adam Smith research fellowship (University of Glasgow)
  4. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/K027611/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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We study the influence of acoustic fields on the evaporative self-assembly of solute particles suspended inside sessile droplets of complex fluids. The self-assembly process often results in an undesirable ring-like heterogeneous residue, a phenomenon known as the coffee-ring effect. Here we show that this ring-like self-assembly can be controlled acoustically to form homogeneous disc-like or concentrated spot-like residues. The principle of our method lies in the formation of dynamic patterns of particles in acoustically excited droplets, which inhibits the evaporation-driven convective transport of particles towards the contact line. We elucidate the mechanisms of this pattern formation and also obtain conditions for the suppression of the coffee-ring effect. Our results provide a more general solution to suppress the coffee-ring effect without any physiochemical modification of the fluids, the particles or the surface, thus potentially useful in a broad range of industrial and analytical applications that require homogenous solute depositions.

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