Abstract

We investigate the impact of buoyancy on the solute mass transport in an evaporating liquid mixture (non-volatile solute $+$ solvent) confined in a slit perpendicular to the gravity. Solvent evaporation at one end of the slit induces a solute concentration gradient which in turn drives free convection due to the difference between the densities of the solutes and the solvent. From the complete model coupling mass transport and hydrodynamics, we first use a standard Taylor-like approach to derive a one dimensional non-linear advection-dispersion equation describing the solute concentration process for a dilute mixture. We then perform a complete analysis of the expected regimes using both scaling analysis and asymptotic solutions of this equation. The validity of this approach is confirmed using a thorough comparison with the numerical resolution of both the complete model and the 1D advection-dispersion equation. Our results show that buoyancy-driven free convection always impacts solute mass transport at long time scales, dispersing solutes in a steadily increasing length scale along the slit. Beyond this confined drying configuration, our work also provides an easy way for evaluating the relevance of buoyancy on mass transport in any other microfluidic configuration involving concentration gradients.

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