The morphology of coatings created by electrostatic deposition can be generally divided into three categories: wire mats, particles, and films. At intermediate regimes, there should exist nanowire forests as a...
<p>The morphology of coatings
created by electrostatic deposition can be generally divided into three
categories: wire mats (electrospinning), particles (electrostatic spray,
electrospray deposition(ESD)), and films (all low-viscosity applications).
There should exist nanowire forests as a mixture of wire and particulate
deposition. Such a morphology has yet to be observed experimentally, which we
propose is the result of spatially-varying viscosity in sprayed droplets. We
utilized electrostatic dissipative particle dynamics (DPD) and ESD to explore
the spray of methylcellulose (MC) in water:ethanol mixtures. MC possesses a lower critical solution
temperature (LCST) in water and water:ethanol blends. DPD simulations reveal
that the barrier to forming nanowire forests is the directional nature of evaporation,
but they should form were evaporation homogeneous. In ESD conducted above the
LCST, MC and water phase separate concurrently with the rapid evaporation of
ethanol, forming a homogeneous gel phase. This gel can undergo the elongation
of electrospinning on a drop-by-drop basis to create forests of individual
nanowires. Our study indicates that this homogenous evolution of viscosity is
necessary for nanowire forest formation and that the specific viscosity (along
with droplet size) further controls the morphology of the forests.</p>
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