letterThe Journal of Physical Chemistry BMar 23, 2006Closed access

Marangoni Effect Reverses Coffee-Ring Depositions

University of Michigan–Ann Arbor

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

We show here both experimentally and theoretically that the formation of "coffee-ring" deposits observed at the edge of drying water droplets requires not only a pinned contact line but also suppression of Marangoni flow. For simple organic fluids, deposition actually occurs preferentially at the center of the droplet, due to a recirculatory flow driven by surface-tension gradients produced by the latent heat of evaporation. The manipulation of this Marangoni flow in a drying droplet should allow one in principle to control and redirect evaporation-driven deposition and assembly of colloids and other materials.

Citation impact

1,597
total citations
FWCI
28.75
Percentile
100%
References
20
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Marangoni effect
  • Coffee ring effect
  • Surface tension
  • Evaporation
  • Deposition (geology)
  • Flow (mathematics)
  • Materials science
  • Chemical physics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Clean water and sanitation
No related works found for this paper.