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Kinetics of Evaporation of Pinned Nanofluid Volatile Droplets at Subatmospheric Pressures
Author(s) -
Daniel Orejon,
Martin E. R. Shanahan,
Yasuyuki Takata,
Khellil Sefiane
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
langmuir
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.042
H-Index - 333
eISSN - 1520-5827
pISSN - 0743-7463
DOI - 10.1021/acs.langmuir.6b00753
Subject(s) - evaporation , nanofluid , chemistry , radius , nanoparticle , kinetics , thermodynamics , volume (thermodynamics) , materials science , nanotechnology , classical mechanics , physics , computer security , computer science
We examine the effects of nanoparticle addition at low concentration on the evaporation kinetics of droplets in the constant radius mode. The evaporative behavior of deionized water and Al2O3 nanoparticle laden water on an aluminum substrate was observed at atmospheric and at different subatmospheric pressures. The two fluids exhibit the same evaporative behavior, independent of the droplet volume or the subatmospheric pressure. Moreover, the linear relationship between evaporation rate and droplet radius, initially proposed by Picknett and Bexon nearly four decades ago for droplets evaporating in the constant radius mode, is satisfied for both liquids. In addition, we have established a unified correlation solely function of fluid properties that extends this relationship to any subatmospheric pressure and fluid tested. We conclude that the addition of a small quantity of nanoparticles to the base fluid does not modify the kinetics of evaporation for pinned volatile droplets.

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