Pulling a solid object from a liquid bath can coat it in a thin layer of liquid. The thickness of the coating layer depends on the speed at which the Keep reading
Tag: particle suspension
Cracking Droplets
Droplets infused with particles — like coffee — can leave complex stains once they evaporate. Here researchers show the complex cracking pattern that develops as a droplet with nanoparticles evaporates. Keep reading
Dripping With Particles
Adding just a little polymer to a fluid can make it viscoelastic and drastically change how it drips. A pure, viscoelastic fluid (left) necks down to a thin filament thanks Keep reading
Particle-filled Splashes
Adding particles to a liquid can significantly alter its splash dynamics, as shown in this new study. In the first image, a purely-liquid droplet spreads on impact into a thin Keep reading
Floccing Particles
Adding particles to a viscous fluid can create unexpected complications, thanks to the interplay of fluid and solid interactions. Here we see a dilute mixture of dark spherical particles suspended Keep reading
Dip Coating
Imagine dipping a rod into a liquid mixture filled with particles. When you pull the rod out, do particles stick to it? The answer depends on the relative importance of Keep reading
Bead-Infused Droplet
A Leidenfrost droplet impregnated with hydrophilic beads hovers on a thin film of its own vapor. The Leidenfrost effect occurs when a liquid touches a solid surface much, much hotter Keep reading
Evaporating Drops
When still drops evaporate from a surface, they do so in several phases, as illustrated in the video above. Initially, the drop forms a spherical cap. At this point the Keep reading
Particle Patterning
Here a container filled with a suspension of neutrally buoyant polystyrene beads and fluid is rotated. As the container rotates, a thin layer of fluid and bunches of particles get Keep reading
Staining Patterns
This timelapse video shows a particulate suspension as it dries and the pattern formation that results. The mixture of silicon dioxide particles and water is spread over a glass slide. Keep reading