Issue 25, 2015

Effect of interface shape on advancing and receding fluid-contact angles around spherical particles

Abstract

The angle of contact between a solid surface and a fluid interface plays a key role in wetting and is therefore a focus in studies of a wide range of natural phenomena and fluidic technologies. The contact angle ranges between two values, a maximum (advancing) angle and a minimum (receding) angle. These limiting angles are thought to be properties of the fluids and of the chemistry or topography of the solid. By contrast, we find that the value of the receding angle can be significantly reduced by altering the interface shape. Using millimeter-sized spheres coated with polydimethylsiloxane and pulled through an air–water interface, we observe that the receding angle decreases from 101 ± 1° at a planar interface to as low as 80 ± 1° at saddle- or cylinder-shaped interfaces. The angle decreases smoothly with the deviatoric curvature of the interface (a measure of the shape anisotropy) and is linked to a non-circular contact line.

Graphical abstract: Effect of interface shape on advancing and receding fluid-contact angles around spherical particles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
24 Feb 2015
Accepted
14 May 2015
First published
15 May 2015

Soft Matter, 2015,11, 4999-5003

Author version available

Effect of interface shape on advancing and receding fluid-contact angles around spherical particles

N. Şenbil, W. He, V. Démery and A. D. Dinsmore, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 4999 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM00466G

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