Abstract

Sedimentation and drying dissipative structural patterns formed in the course of drying aqueous suspensions of colloidal silica spheres (1.2 μm in diameter) were observed in the various sizes of watch glasses. The macroscopic broad ring patterns were formed on the inner inclined watch glass in suspension state within a short time after suspension was set. The important role of the convectional flow of water and colloidal spheres for the pattern formation is supported. The influence of sodium chloride was also studied. It was clarified that the sedimentary spheres move toward upper and outer edges along the inclined cell wall by the cell convection and hence the patterns are formed by the balancing between the outside movement and the downward sedimentation of the spheres. Beautiful microscopic drying patterns were also observed from the optical microscopy.

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