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The article experimentally reveals and theoretically establishes the influence of electric fields on the evaporation kinetics of pendant droplets. It is shown that the evaporation kinetics of saline pendant droplets can be augmented by the application of an external alternating electric field. The evaporation behaviour is modulated by an increase in the field strength and frequency. The classical diffusion driven evaporation model is found insufficient in predicting the improved evaporation rates. The change in surface tension due to field constraint is insufficient for explaining the observed physics. Consequently, the internal hydrodynamics of the droplet is probed employing particle image velocimetry. It is revealed that the electric field induces enhanced internal advection, which improves the evaporation rates. A scaled analytical model is proposed to understand the role of internal electrohydrodynamics, electrothermal and the electrosolutal effects. Stability maps reveal that the advection is caused nearly equally by the electrosolutal and electrothermal effects within the droplet. The model is able to illustrate the influence played by the governing thermal and solutal Marangoni number, the electro Prandtl and electro Schmidt number, and the associated Electrohydrodynamic number. The magnitude of the internal circulation can be well predicted by the proposed model, which validates the proposed mechanism.
The present article experimentally and theoretically probes the evaporation kinetics of sessile saline droplets. Observations reveal that presence of solvated ions leads to modulated evaporation kinetics, which is further a function of surface wettab
The present article discusses the physics and mechanics of evaporation of pendent, aqueous ferrofluid droplets and modulation of the same by external magnetic field. We show experimentally and by mathematical analysis that the presence of magnetic fi
In this article we report the atypical and anomalous evaporation kinetics of saline sessile droplets on surfaces with elevated temperatures. In a previous we showed that saline sessile droplets evaporate faster compared to water droplets when the sub
Pathogens contained in airborne respiratory droplets have been seen to remain infectious for periods of time that depend on the ambient temperature and humidity. In particular, regarding the humidity, the empirically least favorable conditions for th
The article reports droplet evaporation kinetics on inclined substrates. Comprehensive experimental and theoretical analyses of the droplet evaporation behaviour for different substrate declination, wettability and temperatures have been presented. S