Trouble on the surface begins with a wave of tiny bubbles

An air bubble breakup that may compromise the performance of droplet-derived coatings has been uncovered by a team led by Sigurdur Thoroddsen and his Ph.D. student Kenneth Langley at KAUST.
Understanding what happens to droplets when they splash onto solid surfaces is important for applications ranging from ordinary spray painting to inkjet printed circuits. One challenge arises from the air cushion that is trapped underneath the drop during initial contact. Within a fraction of a second, this gas can be compressed and cause the droplet to rebound or adhere poorly to the target.
From cameras that film at 5 million frames per second, the team's images show how thick bands of microbubbles appear when water droplets strike surfaces that are only a few nanometers away from being completely flat.
"We see thatmicrobubbles emerge after the drop starts spreading, which isn't what we anticipated," says Langley. "The speed atwhich some of these bubbles form is also surprising—once nucleated, they grow to their ultimate size in a microsecond or less."
To unravel the mechanism of microbubble formation, the researchers used glass slides coated with a water-repelling film. Their time-resolved images demonstrated that the tiny bubbles appeared when the glass slide was coated with enough layers to produce rugged projections similar in size to the nanometer-scale air pocket.
"If your application is sensitive to air entrapment, such as organic LED displays, it's important to make the surface as smooth as possible," says Langley.
-
As the impact velocities increase from left to right in this image series, microbubble formation becomes stronger and more chaotic. Scale bars are 100 micrometers long.Reproduced under a Creative Commons Attribution Licence 3.0 from reference 1. Credit: KAUST -
The microbubbles appear on slides coated with water-repelling (left) and water-attracting (right) films as long as the surface roughness is more than a few tens of nanometers. The scale bar is 100 micrometers long. Reproduced under a Creative Commons Attribution Licence 3.0 from reference 1. Credit: KAUST
More information: Kenneth R. Langley et al. The air entrapment under a drop impacting on a nano-rough surface, Soft Matter (2018).
Journal information: Soft Matter