2008 Annual Meeting
(358b) Dielectrophoretic Compound Drop Formation Due to Nanodrop Injection at Fluid Contact Lines
Authors
We experimentally verify these predicted cross-over frequencies for a drop pinned to an insulating surface. By adjusting the frequency and voltage of a far field, we control the magnitude, direction, and rate of the induced interfacial force to form complex compound drops. The frequency is tuned sequentially to cause injection. The injected drops coalesce to form a small number of new interior drops whose number is proportional to the outer drop diameter, an observation consistent with simple interfacial energy considerations.
This technique is extended to a simple AC field assisted hydrodynamic focusing device, whose non-uniform channel wettability produces a flowing rivulet bounded by contact lines, to generate compound droplets of various sizes continuously. By injecting alternating phases of material into a forming drop, successive generations of interior droplets produce a Russian-doll drop with multiple layers. The ability to control contact line dynamics via the applied electric field hence allows great control over compound droplet generation.