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arXiv:1903.09350 [physics.flu-dyn]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Dip-coating of suspensions

A. Gans, E. Dressaire, B. Colnet, G. Saingier, M. Z. Bazant, A. Sauret

Published 2019-03-22Version 1

Withdrawing a plate from a suspension leads to the entrainment of a coating layer of fluid and particles on the solid surface. In this article, we study the Landau-Levich problem in the case of a suspension of non-Brownian particles at moderate volume fraction $10\% < \phi < 41\%$. We observe different regimes depending on the withdrawal velocity $U$, the volume fraction of the suspension $\phi$, and the diameter of the particles $2\,a$. Our results exhibit three coating regimes. (i) At small enough capillary number $Ca$, no particles are entrained, and only a liquid film coats the plate. (ii) At large capillary number, we observe that the thickness of the entrained film of suspension is captured by the Landau-Levich law using the effective viscosity of the suspension $\eta(\phi)$. (iii) At intermediate capillary numbers, the situation becomes more complicated with a heterogeneous coating on the substrate. We rationalize our experimental findings by providing the domain of existence of these three regimes as a function of the fluid and particles properties.

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