AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the forced dynamic dewetting of surfactant solutions is influenced by surfactant concentration, using a rotating cylinder experiment to measure dynamic contact angles.
  • Various surfactants (anionic, cationic, and nonionic) with different critical micelle concentrations (CMCs) were tested, revealing that increasing surfactant concentration significantly lowers the receding contact angle, especially at low concentrations compared to the CMC.
  • The results show that the change in contact angle can be explained by local surface tension variations (Marangoni stresses), and while hydrodynamic theory describes the behavior at higher velocities, a notable additional decrease in contact angle occurs at lower velocities.

Article Abstract

In this work we show that the forced dynamic dewetting of surfactant solutions depends sensitively on the surfactant concentration. To measure this effect, a hydrophobic rotating cylinder was horizontally half immersed in aqueous surfactant solutions. Dynamic contact angles were measured optically by extrapolating the contour of the meniscus to the contact line. Anionic (sodium 1-decanesulfonate, S-1DeS), cationic (cetyl trimethylammonium bromide, CTAB) and nonionic surfactants (CE, CE and CE) with critical micelle concentrations (CMCs) spanning four orders of magnitude were used. The receding contact angle in water decreased with increasing velocity. This decrease was strongly enhanced when adding surfactant, even at surfactant concentrations of 10% of the critical micelle concentration. Plots of the receding contact angle-versus-velocity almost superimpose when being plotted at the same relative concentration (concentration/CMC). Thus the rescaled concentration is the dominating property for dynamic dewetting. The charge of the surfactants did not play a role, thus excluding electrostatic effects. The change in contact angle can be interpreted by local surface tension gradients, i.e. Marangoni stresses, close to the three-phase contact line. The decrease of dynamic contact angles with velocity follows two regimes. Despite the existence of Marangoni stresses close to the contact line, for a dewetting velocity above 1-10 mm s the hydrodynamic theory is able to describe the experimental results for all surfactant concentrations. At slower velocities an additional steep decrease of the contact angle with velocity was observed. Particle tracking velocimetry showed that the flow profiles do not differ with and without surfactant on a scales >100 μm.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c6sm00997bDOI Listing

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