Abstract

Fabrication of ring-shaped deposits of microparticles on solid surfaces with the desired length scales and morphology of particle arrangements is of great importance when developing modern optical and electronic resonators, chemical sensors, touch screens, field-emission displays, porous materials, and coatings with various functional properties. However, the controlled formation of ring-shaped patterns scaling from a few millimeters up to centimeters with simultaneous control of particle arrangement at the microscale is one of the most challenging problems in advanced materials science and technology. Here, we report a fabrication approach for ring-shaped structures of microparticles on a glass surface that relied on a local thermal impact produced by the subsurface heater and heat sink. Thermocapillary convection in the liquid covering microparticles in combination with evaporative lithography is responsible for the particle transport and the assembling into the ring-shaped patterns. An advantageous feature of this approach is based on the control of thermocapillary flow direction, achieved by changing the sign of the temperature gradient in the liquid, switching between heating and cooling modes. That allows for changing the particle transfer direction to create the ring-shaped deposits and dynamically tune their size and density distribution. We have studied the influence of the power applied to the heat source/sink and the duration of the applied thermal field on the rate of the ring fabrication, the sizes of the ring and the profile of the particle distribution in the ring. The proposed method is flexible to control simultaneously the centimeter scale and microscale processes of transfer and arrangements of particles and can be applied to the fabrication of ring structures of particles of different nature and shape.

Highlights

  • Multifunctional materials, solid surfaces and films with extraordinary properties are of great importance in advanced material science, modern industry, and medical diagnostics

  • For the implementation of that approach, the technology referred to as the evaporative-induced self-assembly is utilized [1]. This includes the interaction between the physical mechanisms arising in the course of the spontaneous evaporation of droplets, films and meniscus of colloidal solutions, upon various external passive factors, and external forces’ impacts on that system in combination with the evaporation process

  • A spontaneous evaporation of a sessile colloidal droplet leads to the accumulation of particles at the droplet edge and the formation of a ring-shaped pattern

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Summary

Introduction

Multifunctional materials, solid surfaces and films with extraordinary properties are of great importance in advanced material science, modern industry, and medical diagnostics. The intense evaporation at the droplet edge induces in a bulk solution the radially outward-directed compensatory flow resulting in the ring-like deposit at the droplet periphery.

Results
Conclusion
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