Water droplets condensing on solidified phase change materials such as benzene and cyclohexane near their melting point show in-plane jumping and continuous "crawling" motion. The jumping drop motion has been tentatively explained as an outcome of melting and refreezing of the materials surface beneath the droplets and can be thus considered as an inverted Leidenfrost-like effect (in the classical case vapor is generated from a droplet on a hot substrate). We present here a detailed investigation of jumping movements using high-speed imaging and static cross-sectional cryogenic focused ion beam scanning electron microscope imaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
January 2014
We describe the evolution of a water drop saturated with NaCl and the growth of pure water droplets in a breath figure pattern (BF) condensing around it. This salty drop acts as a humidity sink, inhibiting the BF inside a ring at a distance r=δ from the sink center and slowing down BF growth outside the ring. The initial salty drop is taken either from a salt-saturated solution (type I experiment) or by placing an NaCl crystal on the substrate (type II experiment).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater droplets can jump during vapor condensation on solid benzene near its melting point. This phenomenon, which can be viewed as a kind of micro scale steam engine, is studied experimentally and numerically. The latent heat of condensation transferred at the drop three phase contact line melts the substrate during a time proportional to R (the drop radius).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCondensation on rough or superhydrophobic substrates can induce wetting behavior that is quite different from that of deposited or impinging drops. We investigate the growth dynamics of water drops in a well-controlled condensation chamber on a model rough hydrophobic surface made of square pillars. After having followed growth laws similar to those observed on flat surfaces, a transition to an air-pocket-like state occurred because of the bridging of the drops between the pillars.
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