|
'Electrospray'
Droplet Research Yields Surprising, Practical Results
Monday, January 7, 2008
This image, created using a
modeling technique called finite element computation, shows
a droplet forming from a liquid that has been exposed to an
electric field. Chemical engineers at Purdue are the first
to mathematically describe precisely how the process forms
droplets, an advance that could have applications in areas
ranging from manufacturing to medical diagnostics.
|
Credit: Purdue
University, School of Chemical Engineering
Chemical engineers at
Purdue University are the first to mathematically describe
precisely how droplets form when liquids are exposed to electric
fields, an advance that could have applications in areas ranging
from manufacturing to medical diagnostics.
The technique of using small
droplets created by subjecting liquids to electric fields is
vital for a variety of applications, from a type of industrial
painting called electrospraying, to a method for analyzing
molecules in analytical chemistry, to manufacturing tiny micro-
and nanoparticles for research and industry.
"Despite its importance,
industry doesn't really understand exactly how the drops form,"
said Osman Basaran, the Reilly Professor of Fluid Mechanics in
Purdue's School of Chemical Engineering.
New findings showed that a
liquid's viscosity plays a vital role in drop formation and size,
a discovery that contradicts conventional wisdom, Basaran said.
The researchers first created
simulations to describe droplet formation mathematically, and
then they performed experiments to support the computational
work.
"Computational simulations
are now making it possible to understand such phenomena," he
said. "But you always want to back up simulations with
experimental data if at all possible."
The findings are detailed in a
paper appearing in the January issue of Nature Physics. The paper
was written by doctoral student Robert T. Collins, undergraduate
student Jeremy J. Jones, professor Michael T. Harris, and
Basaran, all in the School of Chemical Engineering.
Researchers have known for
decades that applying an electric field to liquid drops causes
the formation of structures that have a perfect cone at the
leading edge.
"Each drop takes on the
shape of a chocolate kiss," Basaran said.
Then, a thin ribbonlike strand
of fluid is emitted from the leading edge of the droplet and
breaks up into smaller droplets.
"This was discovered about
a century ago," Basaran said. "Nobody could really show
precisely how it happened, but technologically it became very
important."
The method could make possible
future technologies for creating flexible electronic circuits and
solar cells by spraying material in ultra-thin layers.
"Making small drops and
controlling drop size is a big deal, and there are many
techniques that people are working on to be able to model these
computationally or theoretically," Basaran said.
"There are many applications that would benefit by knowing
the drop size. You cannot predict the drop sizes unless you have
simulations to tell you how the strand is going to develop and
break up into little droplets."
The same phenomenon occurs in
rain clouds. As rain droplets pick up an electrical charge, they
take on an elongated football shape. Thin strands form at each
end of the football, and those strands, in turn, form small
droplets.
"Again, the ends shoot
these little strands or jets, which break up into drops,"
Basaran said. "And this has been suspected for a century to
play a major role in how thunderstorms work."
Understanding how the drops
form is difficult because the strands are many times thinner than
the original liquid from which they formed, which makes the
mathematics especially challenging.
"Others had not solved
these equations in their full form before because they are very
difficult, and we have now solved them without any
approximations," Basaran said.
Conventional modeling methods
use "diffuse interface" techniques, which do not
precisely predict how the strands and droplets form, he said.
The Purdue researchers used a
more precise method called finite elements with elliptic mesh
generation. The technique breaks down a material into many small
segments and solves the mathematical equations governing the
behavior of each segment separately. Using the method enables
researchers to understand the dynamic, changing shapes of each
segment making up the drop-forming strands and the droplets.
The technique allowed the
engineers to negotiate the dramatic size differences between the
strands and original liquid, a process that falls in the realm of
"multi-scale modeling."
"Our approach allowed us
to do this multi-scale modeling in one big calculation,"
Basaran said.
In the experiments, an electric
voltage was applied to a small metal rod positioned about an inch
from a puddle of liquid. The liquid was pulled toward the tip of
the rod and took on a conical appearance. Strands of liquid,
which subsequently broke into droplets, were then emitted from
the liquid cone.
The Purdue researchers
conducted experiments using liquids with large viscosities,
including those similar to fuels, whereas past research has
concentrated on lower viscosity fluids like water.
"This may prove to be
important in combustion applications because fuel is sprayed into
engine cylinders using fuel injectors," Basaran said. "We
studied higher viscosity fluids to see the effect of viscosity,
which other people had never seen before. It turns out that the
viscosity actually has a big effect on droplet size."
Future research will continue
to study how droplet formation is influenced by other
characteristics of a liquid. These characteristics include the
electrical conductivity of fluids and the surface tension, the
latter being responsible for the beading of water droplets on a
recently waxed car.
"We are just scratching
the surface because there is such a large range of viscosities
and other characteristics of fluids that affect droplet formation
and size," Basaran said. "There could be many
surprises."
The research has been funded by
the U.S. Department of Energy.
Source:
Purdue University

|