We study the microstructures in the drying droplets of
gelatinized
starch solutions on a flat substrate. Cryogenic scanning electron
microscopy studies on the vertical cross-section of these drying droplets
for the first time reveal a relatively thinner solid elastic crust
of uniform thickness at the free surface, an intermediate mesh region
below the crust, and an inner core of a cellular network structure
made of starch nanoparticles. We find that the deposited circular
films formed after drying are birefringent and azimuthally symmetric
with a dimple at their center. We propose that the dimple formation
in our sample occurs due to the evaporation-induced stress on the
gel network structure in the drying droplet. The polarizing optical
microscopic studies show that these films are optically uniaxial at
their center and increasingly biaxial away from the center.
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