## Abstract An experimental study on the spreading of inkjet printed droplets of a polystyrene/toluene solution with varied molar masses on solid dry surfaces is presented. The polymer's numberβaveraged molar mass was varied between 1.5 and 545 kDa, which also caused a variation in the viscosity fr
Spreading and Infiltration of Inkjet-Printed Polymer Solution Droplets on a Porous Substrate
β Scribed by Richard K. Holman; Michael J. Cima; Scott A. Uhland; Emanuel Sachs
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 412 KB
- Volume
- 249
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
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β¦ Synopsis
Simultaneous spreading and infiltration of inkjet-printed droplets has been studied. Small (54- and 63-microm diameter) droplets of an aqueous polymer solution (2.4 vol% polyacrylic acid, PAA, MW 60,000) were deposited on high green density porous ceramic beds, and the wetting-induced spreading and infiltration of the droplets were characterized. The time scales for spreading and infiltration were comparable (approximately milliseconds), resulting in interruption of the spreading prior to completion by infiltration of the liquid into the powder bed, a situation that has received little treatment in the literature. The infiltration time was varied by changing the pore size (via particle size) in the powder bed, and it was confirmed that slower infiltration resulted in greater spreading of the liquid. The spreading and infiltration of the droplet were modeled to examine the coupling between the two processes and allow prediction of the maximum extension of the droplet as a function of the powder bed particle size. The liquid spreading was found to follow r(t)=a(b+t)(n) behavior, and the effect of particle size on infiltration time was used to predict the point at which spreading ceases due to infiltration for various particle sizes.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The inkjet printing of a polymeric solution into a porous substrate was studied, with the focus on phenomena occurring within the pore space during infiltration. Lines of aqueous polyacrylic acid (PAA) solution were printed onto the surface of porous, high-green-density ceramic powder beds. The PAA
## Abstract The behavior of water droplets deposited on a polymer solution/air interface has been studied. Encapsulation of water droplets with polymer films was observed for solutions based on chlorinated and aromatic solvents, and amorphous polymers. The possibility of producing thin polymer film
## Abstract Poly(methacrylic acid) was grafted on a nanoporous polycarbonate membrane using the glowβdischarge method. Atomic force microscopy showed that the pore size is dependent upon pH in such a way that a low pH the graft chains are protonated and contracted to open the pore, whereas at high