4.5 Article

Electrospray deposition, model, and experiment: Toward general control of film morphology

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 110, Issue 46, Pages 23351-23364

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp064147+

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Poly(vinylidene fluoride) film formation with electrospray deposition has been studied with support of a droplet evaporation model. The input parameters of the model consist basically of the solvent, the solute concentration, the flow rate, and the solution conductivity. The model provides the droplet size, the solute concentration, the droplet velocity, and the shear stress of the droplet at impact as a function of the distance between the nozzle and the substrate. With some additional experimental information such as the size change of the film with spray distance and the viscosity of the solution, the growth rate of the film and the shear rate of the droplet at impact can be determined. Growth rate is shown to define distinct regimes of film formation. In those regimes, only a single factor or a limited number of factors controls the film morphology. The most important factors include the shear rate and the surface energy. It is found that at a specific range of growth rates only the shear rate determines the morphology of the polymer film. Growth rate, as the defining quantity of film morphology, is not limited to polymer solutions. Therefore, the growth rate, in combination with the control factors mentioned above, functions as a general framework through which understanding and control of film formation with electrospray deposition can be improved.

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