Surface Wettability Analysis of Nichrome Alloy Based on the Measurements of Sessile Droplet Contact Angles

Author(s):  
A. Kumarasiri ◽  
D. A. S. Amarasinghe ◽  
D. Attygalle
2016 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miroslav Fér ◽  
Martin Leue ◽  
Radka Kodešová ◽  
Horst H. Gerke ◽  
Ruth H. Ellerbrock

Abstract The organo-mineral coatings of soil aggregates, cracks, and biopores control sorption and macropore-matrix exchange during preferential flow, in particular in the clay-illuvial Bt-horizon of Luvisols. The soil organic matter (SOM) composition has been hypothesized to explain temporal changes in the hydraulic properties of aggregate surfaces. The objective of this research was to find relations between the temporal change in wettability, in terms of droplet infiltration dynamics, and the SOM composition of coated and uncoated aggregate surfaces. We used 20 to 40 mm sized soil aggregates from the Bt2 horizon of a Haplic Luvisol from loess that were (i) coated, (ii) not coated (both intact), and (iii) aggregates from which coatings were removed (cut). The SOM composition of the aggregate surfaces was characterized by infrared spectroscopy in the diffuse reflection mode (DRIFT). A potential wettability index (PWI) was calculated from the ratio of hydrophobic and hydrophilic functional groups in SOM. The water drop penetration times (WDPT) and contact angles (CA) during droplet infiltration experiments were determined on dry and moist aggregate samples of the three types. The decrease in the CA with time was described using the power function (CA(t) = at−b). For dry aggregates, the WDPT values were larger for coated as compared to uncoated regions on the aggregate surfaces, and increased with increasing PWI value (R2 = 0.75). The a parameter was significantly related to the WDPT (R2 = 0.84) and to the PWI (R2 = 0.64). The relations between the b parameter and the WDPT (R2 = 0.61) and the PWI (R2 = 0.53) were also significant. The WDPT values of wet soil aggregates were higher than those of dry aggregates due to high water contents, which limited the droplet infiltration potential. At the wet aggregate surfaces, the WDPT values increased with the PWI of the SOM (R2 = 0.64). In contrast to dry samples, no significant relationships were found between parameters a or b of CA(t) and WDPT or PWI for wet aggregate surfaces. The results suggest that the effect of the SOM composition of coatings on surface wettability decreases with increasing soil moisture. In addition to the dominant impact of SOM, the wettability of aggregate surfaces could be affected by different mineralogical compositions of clay in coatings and interiors of aggregates. Particularly, wettability of coatings could be decreased by illite which was the dominant clay type in coatings. However, the influence of different clay mineral fractions on surface wettability was not due to small number of measurements (2 and 1 samples from coatings and interiors, respectively) quantified.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 10
Author(s):  
Lukman Hakim ◽  
Irsandi Dwi Oka Kurniawan ◽  
Ellya Indahyanti ◽  
Irwansyah Putra Pradana

The underlying principle of surface wettability has obtained great attentions for the development of novel functional surfaces. Molecular dynamics simulations has been widely utilized to obtain molecular-level details of surface wettability that is commonly quantified in term of contact angle of a liquid droplet on the surface. In this work, the sensitivity of contact angle calculation at various degrees of surface hydrophilicity to the adopted potential models of water: SPC/E, TIP4P, and TIP5P, is investigated. The simulation cell consists of a water droplet on a structureless surface whose hydrophilicity is modified by introducing a scaling factor to the water-surface interaction parameter. The simulation shows that the differences in contact angle described by the potential models are systematic and become more visible with the increase of the surface hydrophilicity. An alternative method to compute a contact angle based on the height of center-of-mass of the droplet is also evaluated, and the resulting contact angles are generally larger than those determined from the liquid-gas interfacial line.


2012 ◽  
Vol 531-532 ◽  
pp. 531-534
Author(s):  
Yun Qian Cao ◽  
Qin Fei Ke ◽  
Xiang Yu Jin ◽  
Sha Sha Guo

In this paper, regenerated silk fibroin/polybutylene terephthalate blended mats were prepared using electrospinning method with different blending ratios. The influence of regenerated silk fibroin/polybutylene terephthalate ratio on the morphology behaviors, fiber diameter and the surface wettability of the blended mats were studied. The morphology of the electrospun fibers were characterized by SEM. The average fiber diameter and its distribution can be obtained from the SEM pictures using software Image J. The average fiber diameter was 280nm to 486nm and it changed with the blending ratio. The contact angles and penetration times were used to characterize the surface wettability of the nanofiber membranes. It was found that with the increase of regenerated silk fibroin amount, the surface contact angles and penetration times decreased, which meant that the wettability was greatly improved.


Author(s):  
Alexandru Herescu ◽  
Jeffrey S. Allen

The viscous deposition of a liquid film on the inside of a capillary has been experimentally investigated with a focus on the relationship between the film thickness and surface wettability. With distilled water as a working fluid tests were run in a 622 microns diameter glass tube with contact angles of 30° and 105°, respectively. In the first set of experiments the tube was uncoated while in the second set a fluoropolymer coating was applied to increase the contact angle. A film thickness dependence with the contact angle θ (surface wettability) as well as the Capillary number in the form hR ∼ Ca2/3/cosθ is inferred from scaling arguments. For partial wetting it may explain the existence of a thicker film for nonzero contact angle. It was further found that the non-wetting case of 105° contact angle deviates significantly from the existing theories, the film thickness presenting a weak dependence with the Capillary number. This deviation as well as the apparent non-uniqueness of the solution is thought to be caused by the film instability (rupture) observed during the tests. The thickness of the deposited film as a function of the Capillary number was estimated from the liquid mass exiting the capillary and the gas-liquid interface (meniscus) velocity, and compared to Bretherton’s data and a correlation proposed by Quere. The film thickness measurements as well as the meniscus velocity were determined with the aid of a Photron high speed camera with 10000 frames per second sampling capability coupled with a Nikon TE-2000 inverted microscope and a Precisa electronic balance.


Author(s):  
Hai Trieu Phan ◽  
Nadia Caney ◽  
Philippe Marty ◽  
Ste´phane Colasson ◽  
Je´roˆme Gavillet

Although boiling process has been a major subject of research for several decades, its physics still remain unclear and require further investigation. This study aims at highlighting the effects of the surface wettability on pool boiling heat transfer. Nanocoating techniques were used to vary the water contact angle from 20 to 110° by modifying nanoscale surface topography and chemistry. The experimental results obtained disagree with the predictions of the classical models. A new approach of nucleation mechanism is established to clarify the nexus between the surface wettability and the nucleate boiling heat transfer. In this approach, we introduce the concept of macro- and micro-contact angles to explain the observed phenomenon.


2011 ◽  
Vol 9 (67) ◽  
pp. 313-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Shen ◽  
Guixue Wang ◽  
Xianliang Huang ◽  
Qin Zhang ◽  
Jiang Wu ◽  
...  

Vascular endothelial cell (EC) adhesion and migration are essential processes in re-endothelialization of implanted biomaterials. There is no clear relationship and mechanism between EC adhesion and migration behaviour on surfaces with varying wettabilities. As model substrates, plasma SiO x :H nanocoatings with well-controlled surface wettability (with water contact angles in the range of 98.5 ± 2.3° to 26.3 ± 4.0°) were used in this study to investigate the effects of surface wettability on cell adhesion/migration and associated protein expressions in FAK-Rho GTPases signalling pathways. It was found that EC adhesion/migration showed opposite behaviour on the hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces (i.e. hydrophobic surfaces promoted EC migration but were anti-adhesions). The number of adherent ECs showed a maximum on hydrophilic surfaces, while cells adhered to hydrophobic surfaces exhibited a tendency for cell migration. The focal adhesion kinase (FAK) inhibitor targeting the Y-397 site of FAK could significantly inhibit cell adhesion/migration, suggesting that EC adhesion and migration on surfaces with different wettabilities involve ( p )FAK and its downstream signalling pathways. Western blot results suggested that the FAK-Rho GTPases signalling pathways were correlative to EC migration on hydrophobic plasma SiO x :H surfaces, but uncertain to hydrophilic surfaces. This work demonstrated that surface wettability could induce cellular behaviours that were associated with different cellular signalling events.


Author(s):  
Svyatoslav S. Chugunov ◽  
Douglas L. Schulz ◽  
Iskander S. Akhatov

It is recognized that small liquid droplet placed on the solid substrate forms equilibrium contact angle that can be obtained from well-known Young’s law. Previously, deviations from Young’s law were demonstrated for the droplets exposed to external fields (gravity, electric, etc) and for the droplets on non-homogeneous substrates. This work reveals that the Young’s equilibrium contact angle can be altered by geometrical reasons only. We consider a ring-shaped droplet on a solid substrate as a test structure for our discussion. We use the global energy consideration for analysis of system equilibrium for the case of freely deposited liquid with no external forces applied. The theoretical analysis shows that steady ring-shaped liquid structure on a solid substrate does exist with contact angles on both contact lines to be different from the Young’s equilibrium contact angle.


1998 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 302-308 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. P. Renken ◽  
G. Subbarayan

Solder shape prediction is essential for accurate fatigue life determination and joint design optimization. In the present paper, a new solution approach using the surface tension theory is developed to simultaneously predict standoff height, wetted surface area, contact angles, and solder shape by including energy effects between a molten solder body and an arbitrarily shaped solid body. Existing models for solder shape prediction do not appear to determine all characteristics including joint standoff height, wetted surface area, and contact angles simultaneously. A general two-body axisymmetric finite element code is developed and coupled with a constrained optimizer to solve four illustrative examples. These examples include the shape of a sessile droplet on a fixed pad, a flip-chip joint, a sessile droplet on a free surface, and a typical ceramic ball grid array solder joint. In all four examples, the results predicted by the present approach compare favorably with available experimental and numerical results.


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