Current research projects

Image Performance tests of condensing units
Image Overall System Optimization of Refrigeration Plant Systems for Energy Transition and Climate Protection
Image Test rigs for refrigeration and heat pump technology
Image Hybrid- Fluid for CO2-Sublimation Cycle
Image Solar Cooling
Image Non- invasive flow measurements
Image Computational fluid dynamics CFD
Image Corrosion inhibitor for ammonia absorption systems
Image Filter Tests
Image 3D - Air flow sensor
Image Practical training, diploma, master, bachelor
Image Electrical components in refrigeration circuits
Image Brine (water)-water heat pump
Image Ionocaloric cooling
Image Cold meter
Image Investigation of material-dependent parameters

You are here:   /  Home


American Institute of Physics publishes a microscopic image taken at the ILK Dresden

into the magazin „Physics Today”

Only extraordinary images make it onto the title of “Physics Today”.

Physics Today 74, 8, 64 (2021); https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.4823 

This microscopic image now belongs to this category.

It emerged in cooperation with the University of Science and Technology Wrocław (Poland) and the University of Padova (Italy) under the lead of Robert Mulka (UoW) and Matthias H. Buschmann (ILK Dresden). They microscopically filmed the drying process of a ten-microliters droplet of a silicon dioxide suspension. At the end of the process, the characteristic coffee-ring pattern with a diameter of ca. 3 mm, known from dried tea or coffee drops, became visible. The goal of the study had been to better understand the formation of nanoporous coating of vaporizer surfaces, e.g. in thermal syphons.

Cracks are ubiquitous in everyday life. Their sizes vary over several magnitudes, from 500 μm as in the examined droplet, up to the 140 km long crack in the Larsen C Ice Shelf in Antarctica discovered in 2017.

Robert Mulka, Matthias H. Buschmann and their colleagues set out to examine crack formation and the process of drying out further. For that purpose, they dispensed droplets of an aqueous silicon dioxide suspension (particle size ca. 70 nm) into two different metallic substrates. A microscope with an attached camera recorded the drying process under lab conditions.

The image published shows the final stage of the drying process with complete crack formation. The coffee ring and the radial cracks are clearly visible. The outer edge of the droplet shows tangential spiral cracks, which appear first and induce the massive radial cracks.

The interplay of Marangoni convection, driven by the gradients of the droplet’s surface tension, and the capillary flow inside the droplet transports the silicon dioxide particles to the edge and thereby forms the coffee ring in the silicon dioxide coating.

During the process of further drying out, tensile and sheer stress forms, which is then relieved when cracks appear. The shape of the cracks depends on the local stress distribution. Spiral cracks first appear in random places on the edge when parts of the silicon dioxide coating detach from the substrate. The radial cracks are result of the interaction between capillary stress and sheer stress between the silicon dioxide layer and the substrate.

(Mulka et al., 623, (2021) 126730, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.colsurfa.2021.126730).  


Your Request

Further Projects

Image

Non- invasive flow measurements

PDPA - flow fields and particle sizes

Image

Computational fluid dynamics CFD

Scientific analysis of flows

Image

Humidifier System for High-Purity Gases

Nafion - moisture transfer

Image

Behavior of multiphase cryogenic fluids

experimental und numerical investigations