4.4 Article

Initial solidification dynamics of spreading droplets

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW FLUIDS
Volume 6, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevFluids.6.L121601

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Max Planck Center Twente
  2. TNO ERP programme 3D nanomanufacturing
  3. German Science Foundation DFG [HA8467/1-1]
  4. ERC [DDD 740479]

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This study reveals the early solidification patterns and dynamics of spreading hexadecane droplets, showing that the rapid growth of crystals determines the eventual arrest of the spreading contact line. By combining nucleation theory and scaling relations for spreading, the temporal evolution of the solid area fraction is accurately calculated and in good agreement with observations.
When a droplet is brought in contact with an undercooled surface, it wets the substrate and solidifies at the same time. The interplay between the phase transition effects and the contact-line motion, leading to its arrest, remains poorly understood. Here we reveal the early solidification patterns and dynamics of spreading hexadecane droplets. Total internal reflection imaging is employed to temporally and spatially resolve the early solidification behavior. With this, we determine the conditions leading to the contact-line arrest. We quantify the overall nucleation behavior, i.e., the nucleation rate and the crystal growth speed and show its sensitivity to the applied undercooling of the substrate. We also show that for strong enough undercooling it is the rapid growth of the crystals which determines the eventual arrest of the spreading contact line. By combining the JohnsonMehl-Avrami-Kolmogorov nucleation theory and scaling relations for the spreading, we calculate the temporal evolution of the solid area fraction, which is in good agreement with our observations.

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