4.6 Article

Self-wrapping of an ouzo drop induced by evaporation on a superamphiphobic surface

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 13, Issue 15, Pages 2749-2759

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6sm02860h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council (CSC) [201406890017]
  2. Oce - A Canon Company
  3. Dutch Technology Foundation STW
  4. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)
  5. Ministry of Economic Affairs
  6. Dutch Organization for Research (NWO)
  7. Netherlands Center for Multiscale Catalytic Energy Conversion (MCEC)
  8. Max Planck Center Twente for Complex Fluid Dynamics

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Evaporation of multi-component drops is crucial to various technologies and has numerous potential applications because of its ubiquity in nature. Superamphiphobic surfaces, which are both super-hydrophobic and superoleophobic, can give a low wettability not only for water drops but also for oil drops. In this paper, we experimentally, numerically and theoretically investigate the evaporation process of millimetric sessile ouzo drops (a transparent mixture of water, ethanol, and trans-anethole) with low wettability on a superamphiphobic surface. The evaporation-triggered ouzo effect, i.e. the spontaneous emulsification of oil microdroplets below a specific ethanol concentration, preferentially occurs at the apex of the drop due to the evaporation flux distribution and volatility difference between water and ethanol. This observation is also reproduced by numerical simulations. The volume decrease of the ouzo drop is characterized by two distinct slopes. The initial steep slope is dominantly caused by the evaporation of ethanol, followed by the slower evaporation of water. At later stages, thanks to Marangoni forces the oil wraps around the drop and an oil shell forms. We propose an approximate diffusion model for the drying characteristics, which predicts the evaporation of the drops in agreement with experiment and numerical simulation results. This work provides an advanced understanding of the evaporation process of ouzo (multi-component) drops.

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