Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, Vol.579, 212-220, 2020
Self-pinning of silica suspension droplets on hydrophobic surfaces
Hypothesis: Self-pinning induced by the aggregation of particles at the edge of a pinned drop is a prerequisite for the coffee ring formation. The edge (three-phase contact line) of a suspension drop on a hydrophobic surface would depin and shrink in the early stage of evaporation process. It is plausible to conjecture that the self-pinning of silica suspension drops depends on the particle size and surface property. Experiments: Two substrate materials, the alkylsilane coated surfaces and the polydimethylsiloxane surfaces, and three different sizes of silica particles are used to explore the criterion of self-pinning of silica suspension drops on these hydrophobic surfaces. The evaporation process of droplets is recorded and further analyzed. Findings: The pinning concentration of silica suspensions of a fixed size linearly depends on the receding contact angle of the surface, irrelevant to the substrate material and initial particle concentration. The pinning concentration decreases along with an increase in particle size. In addition, the pinning concentrations of bi-dispersed silica (e.g. 400 + 1000 nm) suspensions have an excellent agreement with that of larger size (1000 nm) particle system. That implies that the larger particle dominates the system of bidispersed silica suspensions to initiate the self-pinning, further verified by SEM images. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.