Abstract
Chemical diffusion is a mass transport process caused by thermally generated motions of species. In a binary mixture, the diffusion of one species in one direction involves the diffusion of another species in the opposite direction, which corresponds to a single mutual diffusion coefficient. Here, we report a simple and general method to measure such coefficients in binary liquid mixtures, using the PNIPAM/water system as a study case. Experimentally, we show how a simple unidirectional drying cell coupled with a spatially-resolved characterization method such as Raman microscopy can yield concentration gradients developing in between two boundaries of known and constant chemical potential. Acquiring such gradients over time leads to a time-set that is shown to collapse to a single master curve using a change of variable. Such a scaling law offers a self-checking frame for solving analytically the diffusion-advection equation. As a result, we show that a simple analytical formula relates the measured concentration gradient with the concentration-dependent mutual diffusion coefficient. In the PNIPAM/water system, the mutual diffusion coefficient sharply decreases at low water content. Our work thus highlights the importance of considering the concentration-dependence of the mutual diffusion coefficient in complex aqueous solutions and provides a method to measure it.
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