Issue 9, 2024

Dynamics of individual inkjet printed picoliter droplet elucidated by high speed laser speckle imaging

Abstract

Inkjet printing is a ubiquitous consumer and industrial process that involves concomitant processes of droplet impact, wetting, evaporation, and imbibement into a substrate as well as consequential substrate rearrangements and remodeling. In this work, we perform a study on the interaction between ink dispersions of different composition on substrates of increasing complexity to disentangle the motion of the liquid from the dynamic response of the substrate. We print three variations of pigmented inks and follow the ensuing dynamics at millisecond and micron time and length scales until complete drying using a multiple scattering technique, laser speckle imaging (LSI). Measurements of the photon transport mean free path, l*, for the printed inks and substrates show that the spatial region of information capture is the entire droplet volume and a depth within the substrate of a few μm beneath the droplet. Within this spatial confinement, LSI is an ideal approach for studying the solid–liquid transition at these small length and time scales by obtaining valid g2 and d2 autocorrelation functions and interpreting these dynamic changes under through kymographs. Our in situ LSI results show that droplets undergo delamination and cracking processes arising during droplet drying, which are confirmed by post mortem SEM imaging.

Graphical abstract: Dynamics of individual inkjet printed picoliter droplet elucidated by high speed laser speckle imaging

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Dec 2023
Accepted
06 Feb 2024
First published
08 Feb 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 2141-2150

Dynamics of individual inkjet printed picoliter droplet elucidated by high speed laser speckle imaging

R. Antonelli, R. Fokkink, J. Sprakel and T. E. Kodger, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 2141 DOI: 10.1039/D3SM01701J

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