| CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Resembling neatly stacked rows of driftwood abandoned
by receding tides, particles left by a confined, evaporating
droplet can create beautiful and complex patterns. The
natural, pattern-forming process could find use in fields
such as nanotechnology and optoelectronics.
“A lot of work in nanotechnology
has been directed toward the bottom-up imposition
of patterns onto materials,” said Steve Granick, a
professor of materials science, chemistry and physics
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
“We found that beautiful patterns of high fidelity
and regularity could form naturally and spontaneously,
simply by allowing a drop to evaporate in a confined
geometry.”
Granick and former postdoctoral
research associate Zhiqun Lin (now a professor of
materials science at Iowa State University) describe
their work in a paper that has been accepted for publication
in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, and
posted on its Web site. Funding was provided by the
U.S. Department of Energy.
To produce the patterns, Granick
and Lin began by gluing two small mica sheets to cylindrical
mounts. With the cylinders at right angles, a droplet
of volatile solution containing small polymer chains
was inserted between the curved mica sheets. The sheets
were then brought into contact and left undisturbed
until evaporation was complete.
Because evaporation in this
geometry is restricted to the edge of the droplet,
the process results in hundreds of concentric rings
with regular spacing, very much resembling a miniature
archery target. Each ring – composed of polymer chains
abandoned as the solvent receded – is several nanometers
high and several microns wide.
The droplet evaporates in a
jerky, stick-slip fashion, said Granick, who also
is a researcher at the Frederick Seitz Materials Research
Laboratory and at the Beckman Institute for Advanced
Science and Technology.
“While the droplet is sticking
to the surface, a ring of polymer is deposited,” he
said. “As evaporation continues, tension builds in
the droplet. Eventually the droplet jerks to a new
position, the tension is temporarily relieved, and
another ring is deposited.”
The simple evaporative process
could be used to form patterns with many other materials,
such as electrically conducting polymers, nanoparticles
and proteins. Pattern formation could be controlled
by altering the size of the material, changing the
solvent, or modifying the surfaces.
“The
pattern emerges spontaneously from the geometry in
which we put the droplet,” Granick said. “This means
we could make other kinds of patterns by using different
geometries or surfaces with tailored wettability.”
James E. Kloeppel, Physical
Sciences Editor
217 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
|