Issue 15, 2020

Patterning of colloids into spirals via confined drying

Abstract

Drying of complex fluids is a fascinating subject of interest to several growing fields, for example, forensic science, lithography, printing and coating technologies. In this article, we report that the drying of charge stabilized colloidal dispersions between two parallel plates is a route to intriguing self-assembly patterns. We show that when the dispersions are dried in parallel plate confinement, particles deposit as spiral patterns after the complete evaporation of the solvent irrespective of the confinement spacing. The formation of such patterns is understood by analyzing the underlying three phase contact line dynamics during the drying process. Compared to the usual discrete stick-slip motion of the contact line, typically observed in several drying configurations, in the parallel plate drying configuration, the contact line is found to exhibit continuous stick-slip motion. The de-pinning of the contact line is found to occur only locally and is observed to propagate in both clockwise and anticlockwise directions, leading to the patterning of colloids as spirals. Furthermore, we show that while the number of turns in the spiral deposit is influenced by the dispersion volume and particle concentration, the spiral patterns form irrespective of the shape of the particles in the dispersion.

Graphical abstract: Patterning of colloids into spirals via confined drying

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Jan 2020
Accepted
19 Mar 2020
First published
24 Mar 2020

Soft Matter, 2020,16, 3753-3761

Patterning of colloids into spirals via confined drying

R. Mondal and M. G. Basavaraj, Soft Matter, 2020, 16, 3753 DOI: 10.1039/D0SM00118J

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