Marangoni-driven spreading of miscible liquids in the binary drop geometry
Abstract
When two liquids with different surface tensions come into contact, the liquid with lower surface tension spreads over the other. This Marangoni-driven spreading has been studied for various geometries and surfactants, but the dynamics of the binary geometry (drop-drop) has hardly been quantitatively investigated, despite its relevance for drop encapsulation applications. Here we use laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) to temporally resolve the distance L(t) over which a low-surface-tension drop spreads over a miscible high-surface-tension drop. L(t) is measured for various surface tension differences between the liquids and for various viscosities, revealing a power-law L(t) tα with a spreading exponent α ≈ 0.75. This value is consistent with previous results for viscosity-limited spreading over a deep bath. A single power law of rescaled distance as a function of rescaled time reasonably captures our experiments, as well as different geometries, miscibilities, and surface tension modifiers (solvents and surfactants). This result enables engineering the spreading dynamics of a wide range of liquid-liquid systems.
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