4.7 Article

Selective evaporation and contact line motions of evaporating ethylene glycol-water mixture droplets

Journal

APPLIED THERMAL ENGINEERING
Volume 232, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2023.121040

Keywords

Surface plasmon resonance imaging; Selective evaporation; Binary mixture droplet; Evaporation rate; Sessile droplet

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The evaporative characteristics of ethylene glycol-water binary mixture droplets (EGWBMDs) were studied, and it was found that the droplets evaporated in the depinning mode following the constant contact radius mode. The concentration of ethylene glycol increased with time, indicating selective evaporation. The volume variation of EGWBMDs showed a non-linear change due to the different volatility of each component. The evaporation rates of water and ethylene glycol were calculated based on concentration and shape measurements, and were found to be consistent with predictions obtained using a diffusion model, with maximum and average error rates of 6.14% and 2.56%, respectively.
The evaporation of sessile binary mixture droplets with different volatile liquids is essential in various appli-cations such as ink-jet printing, evaporators, fuel combustion, and medical diagnosis. The present study exam-ined the evaporating characteristics of ethylene glycol-water binary mixture droplets (EGWBMDs) used for patterning the functional materials in inkjet printing. In particular, the study focused on selective evaporation and dynamic contact line motion. To this end, surface plasmon resonance and shadowgraph imaging methods were employed to measure the temporal ethylene glycol concentrations and droplet shapes, respectively. The results revealed that EGWBMDs evaporated in the depinning mode following the constant contact radius mode. The ethylene glycol concentrations increased with time; evaporation of water was dominant throughout con-centration measurement, showing selective evaporation. In addition, there was a non-linear change in the vol-ume of EGWBMDs due to the different volatility of each component. In particular, the volume variation changed rapidly at the initial stage. Next, the evaporation rates of water and ethylene glycol were quantitatively calcu-lated based on the ethylene glycol concentration and droplet shape measurement. The evaporation rate obtained from the experiment was found to be consistent with the predictions obtained using a diffusion model, with maximum and average error rates of 6.14 and 2.56%, respectively.

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