(742d) The Leveling of Liquid Coatings in the Presence of Substrate or Interfacial Charge
AIChE Annual Meeting
2013
2013 AIChE Annual Meeting
Engineering Sciences and Fundamentals
Interfacial Aspects of Electrochemical Energy Storage Systems
Thursday, November 7, 2013 - 4:20pm to 4:40pm
Electrostatic charges that accumulate on substrates and at liquid-air interfaces in various coating processes can drive liquid flows that lead to defects. To better understand this phenomenon, we model the leveling of thin liquid films subject to electrohydrodynamic forces. We consider cases of homogeneous and heterogeneous substrate charge distributions and contamination of the film surface by free charge. The liquid is assumed to be Newtonian, both conductive and non-conductive materials are considered, and lubrication theory is employed. Linear stability analysis and nonlinear simulations reveal different leveling criteria for small- and large-amplitude perturbations to the film surface. Heterogeneous charge distributions on the substrate are found to lead to steady curved interface shapes. Using asymptotic methods, we develop analytical expressions to predict these shapes, and consequently, the magnitude of coating defects. We also employ transient nonlinear simulations and a scaling analysis to track the leveling of disturbances created by contamination of the film surface by free charge. The results of our study enable us to develop heuristics for determining the conditions under which coatings subject to electrohydrodynamic forces will level.