Abstract

When a colloidal gel dries through evaporation, cracks are usually formed, which often reveal underlying processes at work during desiccation. Desiccating colloid droplets of a few hundred microliters size show interesting effects of pattern formation and cracking which makes this an active subject of current research. Because aqueous gels of clay are known to be strongly affected by an electric field, one may expect crack patterns to exhibit a field effect. In the present study we allow droplets of laponite gel to dry under a radial electric field. This gives rise to highly reproducible patterns of cracks, which depend on the strength, direction, and time of exposure to the electric field. For a continuously applied DC voltage, cracks always appear on dissipation of a certain constant amount of energy. If the field is switched off before cracks appear, the observed results are shown to obey a number of empirical scaling relations, which enable us to predict the time of appearance and the number of cracks under specified conditions. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images of the surface between the macroscopic cracks show the presence of microcracks, which are wider and more numerous when no electric field is applied. The microcracks are reduced in the presence of stronger fields.

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