Abstract

In this study the short timescale penetration and spreading of liquids on porous sheets is investigated. Three measurement techniques are evaluated: ultrasonic liquid penetration measurement (ULP), contact angle measurement (CA) and scanning absorptiometry (SA). With each of these techniques liquid penetration as well as surface wetting can be measured. A quantitative comparison between the methods is carried out. For our studies we are using model liquids with tuneable surface tension, viscosity and surface energy which are the governing parameters for pore flow according to the Lucas–Washburn equation. Scanning absorptiometry turns out to be an adequate tool for direct measurement for liquid penetration. Ultrasonic liquid penetration showed a stable correlation (R2 = 0.70) to SA and thus also gives a suitable indication on the liquid penetration behaviour. Absorption of individual microliter drops measured in the CA instrument showed different results than the other two measurements. For characterisation of the wetting behaviour the measurement techniques gave substantially different results. We thus conclude that ULP and SA do not capture the wetting behaviour of liquids on paper in the same way as conventional contact angle measurement, it is unclear if their results are meaningful. Finally we are proposing two parameters indicating a combination of liquid penetration and wetting, the slope of the contact angle over time dθ/dt and a contact angle calculated from SA. These two parameters are moderately correlated, supporting the idea that they are indeed capturing a combination of liquid penetration and wetting. While our investigations are restricted to paper, we believe that the methods investigated here are generally applicable to study liquid absorption in thin porous media like microfluidic paper based analytical devices, thin porous storage media, membranes and the like. Our findings are highlighting the importance to have a match in timescale (time for penetration and wetting) and size scale (liquid amount supplied) between the testing method and the actual use case of the material, when analyzing wetting and penetration on porous materials.

Highlights

  • Wetting and liquid absorption in thin, porous materials is a relevant performance characteristic e.g. for micro uidic paper based analytical devices, thin porous storage media or membranes

  • The penetration speed calculated from the contact angle measurement (CA) is neither correlating well to the scanning absorptiometry (SA), nor to the ultrasonic liquid penetration measurement (ULP) data (Fig. 10 and 11)

  • In conclusion we found that ULP and SA did not deliver results for the wetting behaviour that can be compared to standard contact angle measurements

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Summary

Introduction

Wetting and liquid absorption in thin, porous materials is a relevant performance characteristic e.g. for micro uidic paper based analytical devices, thin porous storage media or membranes. Liquid penetration and spreading in HSI printing are taking place within a few hundred milliseconds, requiring measurements with high time resolution. This has lead to the application of various analytical approaches. Used techniques in paper and printing industry are ultrasound measurement (ultrasonic liquid penetration – ULP), scanning absorptiometry (SA) and contact angle measurement (CA). The application of these techniques in characterization of penetration speed and wetting was subject of several studies.[2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12] In our study we are using these instruments for both, measurement of liquid penetration and for surface wetting

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