Interfacial Crystallization within Liquid Marbles

We report interfacial crystallization in the droplets of saline solutions placed on superhydrophobic surfaces and liquid marbles filled with the saline. Evaporation of saline droplets deposited on superhydrophobic surface resulted in the formation of cup-shaped millimeter-scaled residues. The format...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Edward Bormashenko, Pritam Kumar Roy, Shraga Shoval, Irina Legchenkova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Condensed Matter
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2410-3896/5/4/62
id doaj-20f1d2b7c9364c8f88c354c73c1bb05b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-20f1d2b7c9364c8f88c354c73c1bb05b2020-11-25T03:55:00ZengMDPI AGCondensed Matter2410-38962020-10-015626210.3390/condmat5040062Interfacial Crystallization within Liquid MarblesEdward Bormashenko0Pritam Kumar Roy1Shraga Shoval2Irina Legchenkova3Chemical Engineering Department, Engineering Faculty, Ariel University, P.O. Box 3, Ariel 407000, IsraelChemical Engineering Department, Engineering Faculty, Ariel University, P.O. Box 3, Ariel 407000, IsraelIndustrial Engineering and Management Department, Engineering Faculty, Ariel University, P.O. Box 3, Ariel 40700, IsraelChemical Engineering Department, Engineering Faculty, Ariel University, P.O. Box 3, Ariel 407000, IsraelWe report interfacial crystallization in the droplets of saline solutions placed on superhydrophobic surfaces and liquid marbles filled with the saline. Evaporation of saline droplets deposited on superhydrophobic surface resulted in the formation of cup-shaped millimeter-scaled residues. The formation of the cup-like deposit is reasonably explained within the framework of the theory of the coffee-stain effect, namely, the rate of heterogeneous crystallization along the contact line of the droplet is significantly higher than in the droplet bulk. Crystallization within evaporated saline marbles coated with lycopodium particles depends strongly on the evaporation rate. Rapidly evaporated saline marbles yielded dented shells built of a mixture of colloidal particles and NaCl crystals. We relate the formation of these shells to the interfacial crystallization promoted by hydrophobic particles coating the marbles, accompanied with the upward convection flows supplying the saline to the particles, serving as the centers of interfacial crystallization. Convective flows prevail over the diffusion mass transport for the saline marbles heated from below.https://www.mdpi.com/2410-3896/5/4/62interfacial crystallizationliquid marblehydrophobic particlesuperhydrophobic surfacecoffee-stain effect
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Edward Bormashenko
Pritam Kumar Roy
Shraga Shoval
Irina Legchenkova
spellingShingle Edward Bormashenko
Pritam Kumar Roy
Shraga Shoval
Irina Legchenkova
Interfacial Crystallization within Liquid Marbles
Condensed Matter
interfacial crystallization
liquid marble
hydrophobic particle
superhydrophobic surface
coffee-stain effect
author_facet Edward Bormashenko
Pritam Kumar Roy
Shraga Shoval
Irina Legchenkova
author_sort Edward Bormashenko
title Interfacial Crystallization within Liquid Marbles
title_short Interfacial Crystallization within Liquid Marbles
title_full Interfacial Crystallization within Liquid Marbles
title_fullStr Interfacial Crystallization within Liquid Marbles
title_full_unstemmed Interfacial Crystallization within Liquid Marbles
title_sort interfacial crystallization within liquid marbles
publisher MDPI AG
series Condensed Matter
issn 2410-3896
publishDate 2020-10-01
description We report interfacial crystallization in the droplets of saline solutions placed on superhydrophobic surfaces and liquid marbles filled with the saline. Evaporation of saline droplets deposited on superhydrophobic surface resulted in the formation of cup-shaped millimeter-scaled residues. The formation of the cup-like deposit is reasonably explained within the framework of the theory of the coffee-stain effect, namely, the rate of heterogeneous crystallization along the contact line of the droplet is significantly higher than in the droplet bulk. Crystallization within evaporated saline marbles coated with lycopodium particles depends strongly on the evaporation rate. Rapidly evaporated saline marbles yielded dented shells built of a mixture of colloidal particles and NaCl crystals. We relate the formation of these shells to the interfacial crystallization promoted by hydrophobic particles coating the marbles, accompanied with the upward convection flows supplying the saline to the particles, serving as the centers of interfacial crystallization. Convective flows prevail over the diffusion mass transport for the saline marbles heated from below.
topic interfacial crystallization
liquid marble
hydrophobic particle
superhydrophobic surface
coffee-stain effect
url https://www.mdpi.com/2410-3896/5/4/62
work_keys_str_mv AT edwardbormashenko interfacialcrystallizationwithinliquidmarbles
AT pritamkumarroy interfacialcrystallizationwithinliquidmarbles
AT shragashoval interfacialcrystallizationwithinliquidmarbles
AT irinalegchenkova interfacialcrystallizationwithinliquidmarbles
_version_ 1724471298002780160