4.6 Article

Electrowetting-Induced Coalescence of Sessile Droplets in Viscous Medium

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 39, Issue 14, Pages 4917-4923

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.2c03194

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Manipulating the coalescence of microdroplets using electrowetting has gained significant attention recently. The study investigates the electrocoalescence dynamics by considering various operating parameters. A revised characteristic time scale is introduced to account for driving and resisting forces, enabling a universal bridge growth between the merging droplets. Additionally, a geometric analysis is conducted to determine the initial separation distance for precise control of droplet coalescence.
Manipulating the coalescence of microdroplets has recently gained enormous attention in digital microfluidics and biological and chemical industries. Here, coalescence between two sessile droplets is induced by spreading them due to electrowetting. The electrocoalescence dynamics is investigated for a wide range of operating parameters such as electrowetting number, Ohnesorge number, driving frequency, and drop to surrounding medium viscosity ratio. Here, the characteristic time scale from the classical lubrication theory is modified with an additional driving and resisting force due to the electrostatic pressure force and liquid-liquid viscous dissipation, respectively. With the revised characteristic time scale, a universal bridge growth is shown between the two merging droplets following a 1/3 power law during early coalescence followed by a long-range linear variation. To ensure precise control on droplet coalescence, a geometric analysis is also performed to define the initial separation distance.

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