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Nanoparticle agglomeration in an evaporating levitated droplet for different acoustic amplitudes

Tijerino, Erick and Basu, Saptarshi and Kumar, Ranganathan (2013) Nanoparticle agglomeration in an evaporating levitated droplet for different acoustic amplitudes. In: JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS, 113 (3).

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4775791

Abstract

Radiatively heated levitated functional droplets with nanosilica suspensions exhibit three distinct stages namely pure evaporation, agglomeration, and finally structure formation. The temporal history of the droplet surface temperature shows two inflection points. One inflection point corresponds to a local maximum and demarcates the end of transient heating of the droplet and domination of vaporization. The second inflection point is a local minimum and indicates slowing down of the evaporation rate due to surface accumulation of nanoparticles. Morphology and final precipitation structures of levitated droplets are due to competing mechanisms of particle agglomeration, evaporation, and shape deformation. In this work, we provide a detailed analysis for each process and propose two important timescales for evaporation and agglomeration that determine the final diameter of the structure formed. It is seen that both agglomeration and evaporation timescales are similar functions of acoustic amplitude (sound pressure level), droplet size, viscosity, and density. However, we show that while the agglomeration timescale decreases with initial particle concentration, the evaporation timescale shows the opposite trend. The final normalized diameter can be shown to be dependent solely on the ratio of agglomeration to evaporation timescales for all concentrations and acoustic amplitudes. The structures also exhibit various aspect ratios (bowls, rings, spheroids) which depend on the ratio of the deformation timescale (t(def)) and the agglomeration timescale (t(g)). For t(def) < t(g), a sharp peak in aspect ratio is seen at low concentrations of nanosilica which separates high aspect ratio structures like rings from the low aspect ratio structures like bowls and spheroids. (C) 2013 American Institute of Physics. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4775791]

Item Type: Journal Article
Publication: JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS
Publisher: AMER INST PHYSICS
Additional Information: Copyright for this article belongs to AMER INST PHYSICS, MELVILLE, USA
Department/Centre: Division of Mechanical Sciences > Mechanical Engineering
Date Deposited: 28 Feb 2013 08:30
Last Modified: 28 Feb 2013 08:30
URI: http://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/45848

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