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Duelling dry zones around hygroscopic droplets
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2018
Abstract
In the 1480s, da Vinci invented the first hygrometer using cellulose fibres to attract moisture from the atmosphere. Five hundred years later, Williams and Blanc showed that the depressed vapour pressure of a hygroscopic sessile droplet can inhibit condensation within an annular dry zone on the surface. What remains unresolved to this day is whether these regions of suppressed condensation around hygroscopic agents are due to inhibited nucleation versus inhibited growth of the condensate. We elucidate the competition between these two mechanisms by generating steady-state dry zones about frozen water droplets. The choice of ice as the hygroscopic material was motivated by its unique ability to remain undiluted as it attracts moisture from the air. Experiments, scaling models, and simulations where the ice droplet size, ambient humidity and surface temperature are systematically varied reveal that over the vast majority of the parameter space, the inhibited growth dry zone wins the duel over the nucleation dry zone.
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References
Nath et al. supplementary movie 1
Evaporating Raindrops in the Dry Zone: Micrometric rain droplets falling inside the dry zone around a a frozen droplet of volume V = 100 μL, at a substrate temperature Tw = −30 °C, air temperature T∞ = 23.8 °C and humidity of H = 65%. The falling droplets irrespective of their location inside the dry zone evaporate. This shows that the dry zone around the frozen droplet is indeed a flux dry zone.
Nath et al. supplementary movie 2
The Breathing of the Dry Zone: Video shows how the condensation grows in toward the frozen droplet and then evaporates out to δF, when the experiment starts from δ(t = 0) →∞ (Cases III and IV of figure S1). Here the final steady state δF corresponds to a frozen droplet of volume V = 10 μL, at a substrate temperature Tw = −12.5 °C, air temperature T∞ = 14.9 °C and humidity of H = 21%. Scale bar denotes 100 μm.
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