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Electrically induced drop detachment and ejection

Author(s)
Cavalli, Andrea; Martin, David W.; Miljkovic, Nenad; Blanchette, Francois; Preston, Daniel John; Tio, Evelyn; Wang, Evelyn; Bush, John W. M.; ... Show more Show less
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Abstract
A deformed droplet may leap from a solid substrate, impelled to detach through the conversion of surface energy into kinetic energy that arises as it relaxes to a sphere. Electrowetting provides a means of preparing a droplet on a substrate for lift-off. When a voltage is applied between a water droplet and a dielectric-coated electrode, the wettability of the substrate increases in a controlled way, leading to the spreading of the droplet. Once the voltage is released, the droplet recoils, due to a sudden excess in surface energy, and droplet detachment may follow. The process of drop detachment and lift-off, prevalent in both biology and micro-engineering, has to date been considered primarily in terms of qualitative scaling arguments for idealized superhydrophobic substrates. We here consider the eletrically-induced ejection of droplets from substrates of finite wettability and analyze the process quantitatively. We compare experiments to numerical simulations and analyze how the energy conversion efficiency is affected by the applied voltage and the intrinsic contact angle of the droplet on the substrate. Our results indicate that the finite wettability of the substrate significantly affects the detachment dynamics, and so provide new rationale for the previously reported large critical radius for drop ejection from micro-textured substrates.
Date issued
2016-02
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/110034
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mathematics; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Journal
Physics of Fluids
Publisher
American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Citation
Cavalli, Andrea; Preston, Daniel J.; Tio, Evelyn; Martin, David W.; Miljkovic, Nenad; Wang, Evelyn N.; Blanchette, Francois and Bush, John W. M. “Electrically Induced Drop Detachment and Ejection.” Physics of Fluids 28, no. 2 (February 2016): 022101 © 2016 AIP Publishing LLC
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1070-6631
1089-7666

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