324 research outputs found
Effects of Orthogonal Rotating Electric Fields on Electrospinning Process
Electrospinning is a nanotechnology process whereby an external electric
field is used to accelerate and stretch a charged polymer jet, so as to produce
fibers with nanoscale diameters. In quest of a further reduction in the cross
section of electrified jets hence of a better control on the morphology of the
resulting electrospun fibers, we explore the effects of an external rotating
electric field orthogonal to the jet direction. Through extensive particle
simulations, it is shown that by a proper tuning of the electric field
amplitude and frequency, a reduction of up to a in the aforementioned
radius can be obtained, thereby opening new perspectives in the design of
future ultra-thin electrospun fibres. Applications can be envisaged in the
fields of nanophotonic components as well as for designing new and improved
filtration materials.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figure
Bending Instability in Electrospinning of Nanofibers
A localized approximation was developed to calculate the bending electric force acting on an electrified polymer jet, which is a key element of the electrospinning process for manufacturing of nanofibers. Using this force, a far reaching analogy between the electrically driven bending instability and the aerodynamically driven instability was established. Continuous, quasi-one-dimensional, partial differential equations were derived and used to predict the growth rate of small electrically driven bending perturbations of a liquid column. A discretized form of these equations, that accounts for solvent evaporation and polymer solidification, was used to calculate the jet paths during the course of nonlinear bending instability leading to formation of large loops and resulting in nanofibers. The results of the calculations are compared to the experimental data acquired in the present work. Agreement of theory and experiment is discussed. (C) 2001 American Institute of Physics
Branching in Electrospinning of Nanofibers
Electrospinning of polymer nanofibers often begins with a single, straight, elongating, and electrified fluid jet that emanates from a droplet tip when the electric field at the surface is high enough. After some distance an electrically driven bending instability of the elongating jet occurs. For a polymer solution suitable for electrospinning, capillary instability does not cause the jet to become a spray of droplets. Under some conditions, a sequence of secondary jet branches emanates from the primary jet. This paper describes an experiment in which many closely spaced branches along the jet were observed during the electrospinning of a polycaprolactone solution. A theoretical description of the branching phenomenon is proposed. (c) 2005 American Institute of Physics
Slip-controlled thin film dynamics
In this study, we present a novel method to assess the slip length and the
viscosity of thin films of highly viscous Newtonian liquids. We quantitatively
analyse dewetting fronts of low molecular weight polystyrene melts on
Octadecyl- (OTS) and Dodecyltrichlorosilane (DTS) polymer brushes. Using a thin
film (lubrication) model derived in the limit of large slip lengths, we can
extract slip length and viscosity. We study polymer films with thicknesses
between 50 nm and 230 nm and various temperatures above the glass transition.
We find slip lengths from 100 nm up to 1 micron on OTS and between 300 nm and
10 microns on DTS covered silicon wafers. The slip length decreases with
temperature. The obtained values for the viscosity are consistent with
independent measurements.Comment: 4 figure
Iterated stretching and multiple beads-on-a-string phenomena in dilute solutions of highly-extensible flexible polymers
The dynamics of elastocapillary thinning in high molecular weight polymer
solutions are re-examined using high-speed digital video microscopy. At long
times, the evolution of the viscoelastic thread deviates from self-similar
exponential decay and competition of elastic, capillary and inertial forces
leads to the formation of a periodic array of beads connected by
axially-uniform ligaments. This configuration is itself unstable and successive
instabilities propagate from the necks connecting the beads and ligaments. This
iterated process results in the development of multiple generations of beads in
agreement with predictions of Chang et al. (1999), although experiments yield a
different recursion relation between successive generations. At long times,
finite extensibility truncates the iterated instability and axial translation
of the bead arrays along the interconnecting threads leads to progressive
coalescence before rupture of the fluid column.Comment: Submitted to Physics of Fluids. Contains 15 pages, including 6
figures and 1 tabl
Drop Splashing on a Dry Smooth Surface
The corona splash due to the impact of a liquid drop on a smooth dry
substrate is investigated with high speed photography. A striking phenomenon is
observed: splashing can be completely suppressed by decreasing the pressure of
the surrounding gas. The threshold pressure where a splash first occurs is
measured as a function of the impact velocity and found to scale with the
molecular weight of the gas and the viscosity of the liquid. Both experimental
scaling relations support a model in which compressible effects in the gas are
responsible for splashing in liquid solid impacts.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Drop impact upon micro- and nanostructured superhydrophobic surfaces
We experimentally investigate drop impact dynamics onto different
superhydrophobic surfaces, consisting of regular polymeric micropatterns and
rough carbon nanofibers, with similar static contact angles. The main control
parameters are the Weber number \We and the roughness of the surface. At small
\We, i.e. small impact velocity, the impact evolutions are similar for both
types of substrates, exhibiting Fakir state, complete bouncing, partial
rebouncing, trapping of an air bubble, jetting, and sticky vibrating water
balls. At large \We, splashing impacts emerge forming several satellite
droplets, which are more pronounced for the multiscale rough carbon nanofiber
jungles. The results imply that the multiscale surface roughness at nanoscale
plays a minor role in the impact events for small \We \apprle 120 but an
important one for large \We \apprge 120. Finally, we find the effect of
ambient air pressure to be negligible in the explored parameter regime \We
\apprle 150Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Implications of two backward blood spatter models based on fluid dynamics for bloodstain pattern analysis
Bloodstain pattern analysis (BPA) is an integral part of crime scene investigation. For violent crimes involving gunshots, standard practice in police departments worldwide have some physical limitations. For instance, the effect of gravity and air drag on trajectories of blood droplets are neglected using current reconstruction methods, which results in a well-known overestimation of the height of the source of blood. As a consequence, more sophisticated models for blood spatter trajectory reconstruction are being developed, two of which are highlighted in the present work. They allow the prediction of bloodstain patterns produced from backward spattered blood droplets from blunt and sharp bullets. Our recent models attribute the splashing of blood to the Rayleigh-Taylor instability which arises when blood is accelerated towards lighter air. This physically-based description comes with the powerful predictive capability to correlate features of bloodstain patterns with the specific bullet and gun that produced them, as well as with the body position. The results of the numerical models were compared with four experiments simulating blood spatter deposition on a vertical wall through the number of stains produced, average stain area, and average impact angle at the surface, and the agreement found is fairly good. Moreover, further insight is obtained by probing and explaining the influence of observable parameters on the resulting spatter pattern, with the goal of aiding BPA experts evaluating a crime scene
Multifunctional platform based on electrospun nanofibers and plasmonic hydrogel. A smart nanostructured pillow for near-infrared light-driven biomedical applications
Multifunctional nanomaterials with the ability to respond to near-infrared (NIR) light stimulation are vital for the development of highly efficient biomedical nanoplatforms with a polytherapeutic approach. Inspired by the mesoglea structure of jellyfish bells, a biomimetic multifunctional nanostructured pillow with fast photothermal responsiveness for NIR light-controlled on-demand drug delivery is developed. We fabricate a nanoplatform with several hierarchical levels designed to generate a series of controlled, rapid, and reversible cascade-like structural changes upon NIR light irradiation. The mechanical contraction of the nanostructured platform, resulting from the increase of temperature to 42 °C due to plasmonic hydrogel-light interaction, causes a rapid expulsion of water from the inner structure, passing through an electrospun membrane anchored onto the hydrogel core. The mutual effects of the rise in temperature and water flow stimulate the release of molecules from the nanofibers. To expand the potential applications of the biomimetic platform, the photothermal responsiveness to reach the typical temperature level for performing photothermal therapy (PTT) is designed. The on-demand drug model penetration into pig tissue demonstrates the efficiency of the nanostructured platform in the rapid and controlled release of molecules, while the high biocompatibility confirms the pillow potential for biomedical applications based on the NIR light-driven multitherapy strategy
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