Issue 20, 2021

Nanoscopic interactions of colloidal particles can suppress millimetre drop splashing

Abstract

The splashing of liquid drops onto a solid surface is important for a wide range of applications, including combustion and spray coating. As the drop hits the solid surface, the liquid is ejected into a thin horizontal sheet expanding radially over the substrate. Above a critical impact velocity, the liquid sheet is forced to separate from the solid surface by the ambient air, and breaks up into smaller droplets. Despite many applications involving complex fluids, their effects on splashing remain mostly unexplored. Here we show that the splashing of a nanoparticle dispersion can be suppressed at higher impact velocities by the interactions of the nanoparticles with the solid surface. Although the dispersion drop first shows the classical transition from deposition to splashing when increasing the impact velocity, no splashing is observed above a second higher critical impact velocity. This result goes against the commonly accepted understanding of splashing, that a higher impact velocity should lead to even more pronounced splashing. Our findings open new possibilities to deposit large amount of complex liquids at high speeds.

Graphical abstract: Nanoscopic interactions of colloidal particles can suppress millimetre drop splashing

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
27 Jul 2020
Accepted
23 Mar 2021
First published
11 May 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2021,17, 5116-5121

Nanoscopic interactions of colloidal particles can suppress millimetre drop splashing

M. Thoraval, J. Schubert, S. Karpitschka, M. Chanana, F. Boyer, E. Sandoval-Naval, J. F. Dijksman, J. H. Snoeijer and D. Lohse, Soft Matter, 2021, 17, 5116 DOI: 10.1039/D0SM01367F

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