Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
667322 | International Journal of Multiphase Flow | 2013 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Coalescence of sessile droplets is studied experimentally with water-glycerin mixtures of different viscosities. Effects of viscosity on the dimensionless spreading length (Ψ) and the center-to-center distance (L) are investigated for two droplets; the first droplet (Ds) is stationary on a substrate and the second droplet (D0) landing at a center-to-center distance L from the first droplet. For a low viscosity fluid, Ψ is maximum when L approaches zero (or λ â 1, where λ = 1 â L/Ds), which represents a head-on collision. For a high viscosity fluid, Ψ is minimum when λ â 0.6. The effect of λ on line printing for various viscosities is also examined by printing multiple droplets. We found that the larger the viscosity, the less the breakup between droplets; viscosities smaller than 60 wt% glycerin yielded line breakup. The overlap ratio of λ > 0.3 produced not a line, but a bigger droplet or puddle because of coalescence. Data obtained in this work can provide insights for the fabrication of conductive microtracks or microinterconnects in printed-electronics applications where a line breakup between droplets would lead to an electrical circuit short.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
Min Wook Lee, Na Young Kim, Sanjeev Chandra, Sam S. Yoon,