Open Access Article
Qihan Liu
* and
Luochang Wang
Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA. E-mail: qihan.liu@pitt.edu
First published on 27th November 2025
When a drop of liquid is placed on top of a swollen solid, if the liquid is immiscible with the solvent of the swollen solid, the surface tension near the contact line can pull the solvent out from the solid, leading to a phase separation that converts the classical three-phase contact line into a four-phase contact zone. This phase separation can significantly affect the wetting properties of the swollen solid and the effect is known to be time dependent. This paper develops a dynamic osmocapillary model which predicts that the size of the phase separation increases with time, following the scaling relation of t0.32. The prediction agrees well with existing experiments.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 1 Surface tension near the contact line can pull the solvent out from the swollen solid, causing osmocapillary phase separation. | ||
Existing studies often model osmocapillary phase separation as an elastocapillary effect,6,7,15–18 i.e., the formation of the solvent phase is driven by surface tension and limited by the elasticity of the swollen solid. Then the flux towards the phase separation scales as
, where lEC = γ/μ is the elastocapillary length, with γ the surface tension and μ the shear modulus of the swollen solid.15 Correspondingly, the size of phase separation grows with ∝ t1/2.18 Alternatively, Cai et al. developed a phenomenological model that assumes the phase separation has a free energy quadratic in the volume of phase separation.13 The model predicts no power law asymptote. In an earlier paper, we have shown that the equilibrium configuration of such phase separation at contact lines can be accurately predicted by the osmocapillary theory,5 which provides a framework to rigorously model the dynamics of phase separation at contact lines without phenomenological assumptions or handwaving scaling arguments. This paper develops the dynamic osmocapillary model, which predicts that the size of phase separation grows with ∝ t0.32 when the associated elastic deformation is linear. This power law is quantitatively verified against existing experiments.
A poroelastic model requires an elastic part describing the deformation and a kinetic part describing the solvent migration. The Flory–Rehner model is commonly used to describe the elastic response:
![]() | (1) |
Here σij is the Cauchy stress tensor, FiK is the deformation gradient tensor relative to a stress-free dry reference state, det
F is the determinant of FiK reflecting the volume change of the gel, N is the number of load-carrying polymer chains per unit of the reference volume, kBT is the product of Boltzmann constant and thermodynamic temperature. The reference state is taken as the dry polymer network. Since the shear moduli of gels (<10 MPa) are orders of magnitude lower than their bulk moduli (∼GPa), gels deform incompressibly in most cases. Consequently, there will be a hydrostatic pressure p that cannot be determined from the deformation using a constitutive model but rather must be determined from the boundary conditions.19 Following the incompressible assumption, det
F and the local concentration of the solvent C is connected through:19
| det(F) = 1 + CΩ. | (2) |
Here C is the number of solvent molecules per dry volume of the polymer network, Ω is the average volume per solvent molecule. The migration of the solvent in gel is often treated as diffusion:
![]() | (3) |
Here ji is the diffusion flux vector, Mij is the mobility tensor, which generally depends on the deformation. μ is the solvent chemical potential in the solid. μ reflects the coupling between elasticity and the driving force for diffusion. According to the Flory–Rehner model:19
![]() | (4) |
Here χ is a dimensionless parameter describing the mixing enthalpy.
In the study of osmocapillary phase separation, it is necessary to introduce the concept of osmotic pressure Π. In the context of physical chemistry, the osmotic pressure of a stress-free solution is defined as the pressure that need to be applied on the solution to resist the solvent absorption across a semi-permeable membrane (Fig. 2A).20 In the context of the swelling of a polymeric gel, the osmotic pressure naturally generalizes to the pressure to prevent solvent absorption into the gel (Fig. 2B). This compressive pressure required to constrain the gel from swelling is the foundation of measuring gel osmotic pressure through the constrained swelling test.21 Since both gel and solvent are incompressible in common practical conditions, applying a hydrostatic tension of the magnitude Π over the whole system will not affect the thermodynamic equilibrium. Consequently, osmotic pressure Π is also the tension in the solvent to resist the absorption of the gel (Fig. 2C). Take the stress-free ambient solvent as the reference state for chemical potential μ = 0. Since solvent molecules are treated as incompressible, moving one molecule from the stress-free reference state to the solvent under tension Π induces a change in free energy of −ΠΩ. Then the chemical potential in the solvent of Fig. 2C is:
| μ = −ΠΩ. | (5) |
This definition generalizes the osmotic pressure Π to any stress state. Eqn (1)–(5) form the complete constitutive model for the poroelastic media.
There are six interfaces in the system: solid–liquid, solid–air, solid–solvent, solvent–air, solvent–liquid, and liquid–air. On each interface, the interfacial tension leads to the capillary pressure pC. Following the Young–Laplace equation:22
| pC = γκ. | (6) |
Here γ is the interfacial tension of the corresponding interface, κ is the sum of the two principal curvatures. Since the solvent migration is slow, the solvent in the osmocapillary phase separation is always under static equilibrium, i.e. under uniform hydrostatic pressure pC. To be consistent with the assumption of incompressible gel, the solvent must also be treated as incompressible, then the chemical potential in this solvent phase is:
| μ = pCΩ. | (7) |
Combine eqn (7) with eqn (5) we have −pC = Π on the solid–solvent boundary, meaning that the capillary pressure pulling the solvent out from the solid and the osmotic pressure pulling the solvent into the solid balances each other. To determine the size of the osmocapillary phase separation, Neumann's law must be satisfied at the three-phase contact lines:23,24
| γ1n1 + γ2n2 + γ3n3 = 0. | (8) |
Here 1, 2, 3 refer to the three interfaces at the contact line. ni is the unit vector normal to the contact line while tangent to the corresponding interface. Since the stress state and chemical potential of the solvent in the osmocapillary phase separation can be explicitly written out, this solvent phase does not need to be explicitly modeled. One only needs to apply eqn (6) as the traction boundary condition and eqn (7) as the chemical potential boundary condition on the solid phase.
Take an isotropic swollen state as the reference state, the general incompressible nonlinear poroelastic constitutive relation (eqn (1)–(5)) can be linearized into (Appendix 1):
![]() | (9) |
Here εij is the linear strain tensor, G and K are the shear and bulk moduli with the expressions:
![]() | (10) |
![]() | (11) |
is the change in osmotic pressure relative to the isotropic swollen reference state.
is equivalent to the pore pressure in the classical linear poroelastic model but with a negative sign.27 The isotropic swollen reference state is stress-free, with the corresponding reference osmotic pressure:
![]() | (12) |
Eqn (2) becomes:
| εkk = Ω(c − c0) | (13) |
Here c0 is the solvent concentration in the undeformed swollen state. Since the reference state is isotropic, the mobility tensor Mij should also be isotropic, then the law of solvent migration (eqn (3)–(5)) becomes:
![]() | (14) |
Here M is the mobility. At the same time, Darcy's law predicts that the volumetric flux of the solvent q follows:
![]() | (15) |
Here k is the permeability of the porous media, which generally depends on the swelling ratio.28 η is the viscosity of the solvent. Since qi = jiΩ, eqn (15) and (16) require:
![]() | (16) |
The linear poroelastic model has two dimensionless groups, K/G governs the compressibility of the network when solvent can drain freely. Note that this compressibility does not conflict with the incompressibility of the solvent and the undrained gel. Π0/G governs the capability for osmotic pressure to deform the solid. Here Π0 is the osmotic pressure in the undeformed swollen state. If Π0/G ≫ 1, it is easier to deform the solid rather than pulling out the solvent, then osmocapillary phase separation will be insignificant. Π0 can be directly written out. Eqn (10)–(12) connect K/G and Π0/G in the linear poroelastic model with the parameters of the nonlinear Flory–Rehner model. Here the parameters of the Flory–Rehner model form three dimensionless groups: the swelling ratio det
F, NΩ describes the relative strength of network elasticity and polymer–solvent mixing, and χ describes the relative strength of the enthalpy and entropy in polymer–solvent. We plot K/G and Π0/G as a function of swelling ratio det
F for common ranges of NΩ and χ from the dry state to the fully swollen state (Fig. 3A and B). At a low swelling ratio, K/G ≫ 1, indicating the network is nearly incompressible even when the solvent is allowed to drain freely. As the gel approaches the fully swollen state, K/G ∼ 1. At a low swelling ratio, Π0/G ≫ 1, meaning that it is easier to deform the gel than pulling the solvent out. Consequently, osmocapillary phase separation will be negligible. As the gel approaches the fully swollen state, Π0/G → 0, meaning that it is easier to cause osmocapillary phase separation rather than deforming the gel. Consequently, elastocapillary deformation will be negligible. If we plot K/G against Π0/G (Fig. 3C), we see that when osmocapillary phase separation is significant (Π0/G < 1), K/G is nearly a constant on the order 1. Since Flory–Rehner model could not accurately predict the swelling behavior of real polymer networks,21 the exact value of K/G predicted by the model may not be accurate. Nevertheless, the basic trends and the order-of-magnitude behavior in Fig. 3 should be trustable.
The osmocapillary model has two intrinsic length scales, the osmocapillary length lOC = γ/Π0 and the elastocapillary length lEC = γ/G.2–5 Osmocapillary length represents the length scale over which surface tension can cause osmocapillary phase separation. Elastocapillary length represents the length scale over which surface tension can significantly deform the swollen solid. These two length scales lead to two poroelastic relaxation times, the osmocapillary relaxation time, tOC = lOC2η/kG, and the elastocapillary relaxation time tEC = lEC2η/kG. Here kG/η has the dimension of diffusivity. These length and time scales will be used to normalize the simulation results in the following sections.
(1) In most cases, the size of phase separation is much smaller than the size of the droplet and the dimension of the porous solid. Then the curvatures of the droplet and the solid are negligible at the scale of phase separation. The phase separation can be modeled as a 2D plane-strain problem on a flat semi-infinite porous media.
(2) We limit the discussion to the cases where osmocapillary phase separation dominates over the elastocapillary deformation (Π0/G < 1), the deformation in the gel is negligible. Then the swollen solid surface remains flat as osmocapillary phase separation grows. There is no capillary pressure on the flat surface. Also, the small deformation ensures that the linearized model can be used.
Under these two simplifications, the geometry of osmocapillary phase separation can be analytically determined (Appendix 2), with the width w = Cwγ/pC, height h = Chγ/pC, and volume V = CV(γ/pC)2 connected to the solvent–air interfacial energy γ and the capillary pressure in the solvent phase pC. Here Cw, Ch, and CV are constants that depend on the interfacial energies of the six interfaces involved. These relations allow us to track a single variable pC for the evolution of osmocapillary phase separation.
The evolution of the osmocapillary phase separation is governed by the conservation of mass:
![]() | (17) |
Here the integration is over the boundary of the swollen solid covered by osmocapillary phase separation. Using the relation between w, h, V, and pC, eqn (17) can be converted into an ordinary differential equation of the capillary pressure pC:
![]() | (18) |
In eqn (18), if we rescale time with
= t/CV and length with
= Cwx, the factors CV and Cw are gone, meaning that these geometry-dependent factors do not affect the nature of the relaxation. Without loss of generality, we set CV = Cw = Ch = 1 in our study.
Note that eqn (17) only describes the growth of an existing osmocapillary phase separation. It does not describe the nucleation of an osmocapillary phase separation from a flat surface. Consequently, an initial phase separation width w0 must be introduced in the simulation as an initial condition. This is equivalent to placing a line of solvent on a piece of homogeneous gel at t = 0. This initial condition will affect the dynamics of phase separation when the current phase separation width w ∼ w0. When w ≫ w0, the effect of initial condition is negligible, and the simulation reflects the universal dynamics of osmocapillary phase separation.
We implement the above problem in the finite element analysis package COMSOL 6.3. The simulation domain and boundary conditions are schematically represented in Fig. 4A. Taking advantage of the symmetry, we only simulate half of the poroelastic media, where the capillary pressure is applied over the surface from 0 to w/2. Note that the osmocapillary phase separation on top of the solid phase may not be symmetric, as schematically illustrated in Fig. 1B. However, since we assumed small deformation, the solvent phase only applies a uniform pressure over a segment of the flat surface of the solid phase. The uniform pressure over flat surface is symmetric. Note that at the isotropic swollen reference state, the solid is stress-free but has a finite osmotic pressure. Consequently, over the pressure boundary, the stress driving the deformation is the total capillary pressure (eqn (6)) relative to 0 stress. The pressure driving the solvent migration is the difference between the capillary pressure and the reference osmotic pressure Π0. And this pressure difference can be implemented either by adjusting the reference pressure in the bulk or the applied pressure on the boundary. We implemented it by adjusting the reference pressure because the other implementation is numerically less stable in COMSOL.
We set the size of the simulation domain L ≫ w to approximate semi-infinite space. Since we assume small deformation, the flat surface remains flat, there is no capillary pressure on the boundaries. The growth of osmocapillary phase separation implies that the width of the pressure boundary condition, w/2, needs to widen during the simulation. We implement this time-dependent boundary condition by deforming the mesh relative to the solid domain. A sloped line from the edge of the phase separation to the bottom of the simulation domain is defined as a moving boundary to deform the mesh. This line is shifted uniformly rightward during the simulation to represent the growth in the phase separation width w (Fig. 4B). The line ensures that the mesh is uniformly stretched and compressed on both sides. In contrast, if we only shift the boundary point, the mesh will be locally distorted.
The governing equations of the swollen solid outlined in Section 3 are implemented using the built-in poroelasticity module. The changing width of osmocapillary phase separation is modeled as a moving boundary using the deformed geometry module. The evolution equation of the osmocapillary phase separation (eqn (18)) is implemented through the global ODE and DAE module. The domain is discretized with quadratic triangle elements for all modules. We set the element size to be w0/6 at the edge of the osmocapillary phase separation. The element gradually coarsens to 20lOC far from the region of osmocapillary phase separation. The simulation is regularly remeshed to avoid element distortion associated with the moving boundary (Fig. 4B). We set w0/2 = 10−3lOC at t = 0 as the initial condition. An example simulation file is provided as SI. For this initial phase separation size, the capillary pressure pC will be 103Π0, which can lead to large deformation at short time scales. At long time scales, Π0/G < 1 ensures small deformation. We maintain the linear poroelastic treatment at all time scales so that any deviation from the model indicates the nonlinear effect. We perform the simulation from t = 10−5tOC to t = 105tOC. We limit the first time step to be much less than the relaxation time associated with w0, w02η/kG, to accurately resolve the initial response. The simulation domain size is fixed to L = 300lOC, which ensures that the osmotic pressure Π in the swollen solid is negligibly affected (<1%) by the solvent removed by osmocapillary phase separation. In the true semi-infinite limit, Π should not be affected by the phase separation. Recall that w = Cwγ/pC and pC = −Π at equilibrium, then <1% change in Π implies <1% error in w compared to the semi-infinite limit.
If we normalize the results using elastocapillary length lEC = γ/G and elastocapillary relaxation time tEC = lEC2η/kG, we see that all cases follow the same relaxation asymptotic at short time (Fig. 5B), indicating the relaxation dynamics is independent of the stress-free osmotic pressure Π0. Relaxation at the short time scale follows the power law w ∝ t0.32. This power law can be interpreted through the following scaling analysis. Here we use “∝” to indicate “proportional to”. Since V ∝ w2, eqn (17) leads to:
| wdw ∝ wqydt. | (19) |
Recall eqn (15), qy ∝ ∂Π/∂γ. We can estimate the difference in Π by the capillary pressure γ/w and the length scale of diffusion as w, then ∂Π/∂γ ∝ γ/w2. That is:
| qy ∝ γ/w2. | (20) |
Combining eqn (19) and (20), we can integrate to:
| w3 ∝ t. | (21) |
This corresponds to w ∝ t0.33. The difference between t0.33 and t0.32 could be due to the negligence of the inhomogeneous flux field in the estimation. This is scaling is different from the classical scaling of Fickian diffusion,29 which predicts a t0.5 power law for increasing length scales. The difference between t0.33 and t0.5 is caused by the evolving boundary pressure and boundary width in osmocapillary phase separation. Under this normalization, the difference in equilibration time is more significant compared to Fig. 5A. This is because under this normalization, higher Π0/G also implies a smaller volume of equilibrium phase separation V0 ∝ (γ/Π0)2 = lOE2(Π0/G)−2 to diffuse out from the solid.
Next, we compare the simulation of different K/G with fixed Π0/G = 10−2. It turns out that the compressibility of the polymer network only weakly affects the relaxation of osmocapillary phase separation (Fig. 5C), indicating that the osmocapillary relaxation time tOC = lOC2η/kG is a good time scale for normalization. When K/G is varied between 0.1 to 10, there is only about 10% change in the osmocapillary phase separation size w at a fixed time t. Note that the hydraulic diffusivity due to poroelastic effect, D = (K + 4G/3)k/η, is sensitive to K/G.30 However, while a higher network bulk modulus K leads to faster diffusion, it also limits the volumetric change of the swollen solid. Then a gentler gradient of solvent content slows down the solvent diffusion. Since the total volume of osmocapillary phase separation is not affected by K/G, these two effects largely cancel out so that osmocapillary relaxation time is insensitive to K/G.
We first compare the simulation of different Π0/G at fixed K/G = 1. Here normalizing using the osmocapillary length lOC = γ/Π0 is equivalent to normalizing using the simulation domain size because we fix L = 300lOC. We see the higher Π0/G leads to larger elastic deformation (Fig. 6A). By linear elasticity, the displacement is linearly proportional to Π0/G. If we further normalize H with Π0/G, we see all cases converge at the short and long time scales (Fig. 6B), corresponding to the undrained and drained limits. Here the case of Π0/G = 10−3 slightly deviates from the other cases at the drained (long-time) limit because the magnitude of H is so small before normalization (recall Fig. 6A) that the slight deswelling of the solid due to osmocapillary phase separation becomes non-negligible. If the comparison were done using an even larger simulation domain, the deviation should disappear. At the intermediate time, all cases show H first decreases then increase. This is because initially osmocapillary phase separation locally drains solvent thus causing temporary deswelling. Near equilibrium, osmocapillary phase separation ceases to pull out solvent. Then surrounding solvent can replenish the local deswollen region. The slower the transport of the solvent, the more significant the dip in H. Indeed, we see more significant dip for cases of lower Π0/G, which is consistent with the slower relaxation observed at lower Π0/G in Fig. 5.
Next, we compare the simulation of different K/G with fixed Π0/G = 10−2. Here the undrained limit at short time scale is unaffected by network compressibility (Fig. 6C). Only the drained limit at long time scale is affected. It shows that the more compressible the network is, the easier it is to deform the solid in the drained limit. Also, the less compressible the network is (higher K/G), the less dip in H in the intermediate time scale. If the network is fully incompressible, there would be a monotonic drop in H with time, reflecting the decreasing capillary pressure as the size of osmocapillary phase separation increases.
To verify the w ∝ t0.32 scaling (Fig. 5) and the non-monotonic H–t relation (Fig. 6), we focus on the relaxation data over the fully swollen elastomers measured by Cai et al., which has the longest relaxation time, giving more data points to reflect the relaxation process. Cai et al. have measured the evolution of osmocapillary phase separation using silicone oil of three different molecular weights: 14 kg mol−1, 28 kg mol−1, and 49 kg mol−1 (Fig. 7). They characterized the elastic deformation using the maximum vertical surface displacement relative to the initial undeformed surface, which is equivalent to H discussed in Fig. 6. They characterized the size of osmocapillary phase separation by the vertical distance between the highest points of the solvent surface and the solid surface. This is equivalent to our phase separation height h and is connected to the phase separation width w by a constant as discussed in Section 4. Then their measurements can be directly compared to the simulated w and H discussed in Fig. 5 and 6. The deformation size for the 14 kg mol−1 sample shows a clear decrease then increase behavior (Fig. 7A), agreeing with the behavior of H in our simulation (Fig. 5). Since silicone oil with higher molecular weight relaxes slower, samples with 28 kg mol−1 (Fig. 7B) and 49 kg mol−1 (Fig. 7C) did not show the increase in deformation size by the end of the measurement. The deformation size dominates over the phase separation at time scales shorter than ∼103 s, indicating that nonlinear deformation is non-negligible at such time scales. The linear poroelastic modeling is only expected to be applicable at longer time scales.
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| Fig. 7 The phase separation size (corresponding to our w) and the deformation size (corresponding to our H) measured by Cai et al.13 for silicone oil of molecular weight (A) 14 kg mol−1 (B) 28 kg mol−1 (C) 49 kg mol−1. | ||
To better compare the dynamic of phase separation with the simulated scaling law w ∝ t0.32, we plot the separation size of all samples in one plot (Fig. 8A). Two additional measurements of 14 kg mol−1 and 49 kg mol−1 samples are included. Since stress-free osmotic pressure Π0 can easily change by orders of magnitude with a small change in solvent content near the fully swollen state (Fig. 3B), measurements of the same molecular weight show a variability comparable to that between measurements of different molecular weights. Nevertheless, all five sets of data follow the w ∝ t0.32 scaling at long time scales above ∼103 s. Limited by the range of data, the difference between w ∝ t1/3 and w ∝ t0.32 cannot be experimentally distinguished. At short time scales, the nonlinear deformation is significant, and the relaxation is noticeably faster than w ∝ t0.32. For similar experiments, Qian et al. used t1/2 to fit the relaxation in the short time scales.18 Cai et al.'s data do not support the t1/2 scaling at the short time scale. In Fig. 8A, relaxation keeps getting faster at shorter time scales. The t1/2 power law can appear tangent to the relaxation data at intermediate time scales but is not an asymptote. The accelerated relaxation can be attributed to two nonlinear effects. First, if deformation induces significant surface curvature, the capillary pressure near osmocapillary phase separation pulls solvent towards the surface, accelerating the transport (Fig. 8B). Second, in the linear case, solvent flux into osmocapillary phase separation increases the curvature of the solvent surface, thus reducing the capillary pressure in the osmocapillary phase separation, which is the driving force for solvent migration. In the nonlinear case, the solvent flux is largely consumed by replacing the volume occupied by deformed solid without changing the surface curvature, thus not affecting the capillary pressure (Fig. 8C). Consequently, the driving force decreases slower, and overall relaxation is faster.
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| Fig. 8 Compare with experimentally measured growth dynamics of osmocapillary phase separation (A) experimental data agrees with the w ∝ t0.32 (solid black lines) scaling at long time scales when linear deformation assumption is valid. Relaxation is faster than both t0.32 and the conventional t1/2 (dashed black lines) at short time scales when nonlinear effect is significant. Same colors correspond to the same data set in Fig. 7. (B) With significant nonlinear deformation, capillary pressure on the surface promotes the solvent migration towards the surface, thus accelerating the relaxation. (C) With significant nonlinear deformation, the flux into the osmocapillary phase separation mainly fills the volume occupied by the deformed solid (encircled by red dashed line) rather than increasing the curvature of the solvent surface, thus not reducing the capillary pressure in the phase separation, leading to faster relaxation. | ||
![]() | (A1) |
![]() | (A2) |
Here we have used eqn (5) to replace μ with Π in eqn (4). Cancel out p from eqn (A1) and (A2). The terms independent of εij gives the equilibrium condition at the new reference state:
![]() | (A3) |
The stress-free condition at this reference state (σij = 0) requires:
![]() | (A4) |
Then the terms linear in εij gives:
![]() | (A5) |
Here
is the deviation of the osmotic pressure from the reference state. Eqn (A5) are in the form of eqn (9) with G and K identified in eqn (10) and (11).
aSL cos θSL = aGS − aGL,
| (A6) |
cos θSA = aGS − aGA.
| (A7) |
At a length scale much larger than the osmocapillary phase separation, the apparent contact angle of the liquid droplet on the solid substrate is θ at the liquid–solvent–air contact line. The force balance over the whole solvent phase recovers the classical Young's equation:
aLA cos θ = aGL − aGA.
| (A8) |
Introducing two auxiliary angles α and β, the force balance at this contact line gives:
aLA cos θ = aSL cos α − cos β,
| (A9) |
aLA sin θ = aSL sin α + sin β.
| (A10) |
Eqn (A6)–(A10) allows the angles to be fully determined by the ratios between interfacial tensions:
![]() | (A11) |
Eqn (A11) completely determines the shape of the phase separation. The size of the phase separation is determined by the length scale γ/pC where pC is the capillary pressure in the solvent phase. According to the Young–Laplace equation, the solvent–liquid and solvent–air interfaces are both circular arcs. Their radii of curvature are aSLγ/pC and γ/pC. Then according to the schematics in Fig. 9B, the phase separation height h can be geometrically determined as h = γ/pC − γ/pC
cos
β. Recalling the definition h = Chγ/pC, we have:
Ch = 1 − cos β.
| (A12) |
The phase separation width w can be determined as w = (aSLγ/pC)(sin
α − sin
θSL) + (γ/pC)(sin
β − sin
θSA). Recalling the definition w = Cwγ/pC, we have:
Cw = aSL(sin α − sin θSL) + sin β − sin θSA.
| (A13) |
We assume the geometry has a unit in-plane depth, then we calculate the area of phase separation in Fig. 9B to represent the volume V. Consider the left half of the phase separation. The area of phase separation under solvent–liquid interface is denoted as A1. Shape A1, together with a fan-shape A2 = (aSLγ/pC)2(α + θSL − π)/2, and a triangle A3 = (aSLγ/pC)2
sin(π − θSL)cos(π − θSL)/2, forms a trapezoid: A1 + A2 + A3 = ((aSLγ/pC)cos(π − θSL) + h)(aSLγ/pC)sin
α/2. A1 is then calculated by subtracting A2 and A3 from the trapezoid. We can similarly derive the area of the right half of the phase separation. Then recalling the definition V = CV(γ/pC)2, we have
![]() | (A14) |
Note that all angular variables in eqn (A12)–(A14) can be expressed by the interfacial energies of the six interfaces involved, as eqn (A11) shows.
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