Issue 47, 2017

Drying kinetics of water droplets stabilized by surfactant molecules or solid particles in a thin non-volatile oil layer

Abstract

We have investigated drying of water droplets stabilized by solid particles or surfactant molecules in a thin oil layer. The surfactant-stabilized droplets isotropically shrink, whereas the droplets stabilized by spherical particles severely deform during drying because of buckling of the particulate shells. However, buckling of the shells hardly affects droplet drying. The drying times for complete evaporation are almost the same for water droplets with the same initial diameter and the drying time is independent of the type of surface stabilizer (particles or surfactant). The drying kinetics of the water droplets is well described by mathematical models, in which diffusion of water molecules in the oil phase to the oil–air interface is proposed as the rate-determining process. Droplets with a diameter comparable with the thickness of the oil layer shrink faster than small droplets because of the short diffusion length from the water droplets to the oil–air interface. We also investigated drying of water droplets stabilized by plate-like mica particles. The droplets also buckled but larger shells of mica particles remained compared with those of spherical particles. In addition, a longer drying time is necessary for some droplets stabilized by mica particles. These results indicate the possible effect of the particle morphology on the buckling and drying kinetics of particle-stabilized water droplets.

Graphical abstract: Drying kinetics of water droplets stabilized by surfactant molecules or solid particles in a thin non-volatile oil layer

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Oct 2017
Accepted
13 Nov 2017
First published
14 Nov 2017

Soft Matter, 2017,13, 8990-8998

Drying kinetics of water droplets stabilized by surfactant molecules or solid particles in a thin non-volatile oil layer

H. Miyazaki and S. Inasawa, Soft Matter, 2017, 13, 8990 DOI: 10.1039/C7SM01989K

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