论文标题
水饱和PDMS海绵干燥期间的塌陷和空化
Collapse and cavitation during drying of water-saturated PDMS sponges with closed porosity
论文作者
论文摘要
在本文中,我们研究了水饱和多孔的聚二甲基硅氧烷(PDMS)弹性体的干燥,其孔隙率封闭孔隙率,仅通过在PDMS中扩散水才有可能蒸发水。从水/PDMS乳液开始,我们制造了具有不同孔径分布的软孔样品,平均直径范围为10至300 $μ$ m。在这些材料中,干燥可能导致孔隙率低的状态,或者是孔的空化和重新开放。使用光学显微镜和孔隙度测量,我们在干燥的结果上展示了孔径的重要性以及相互作用的重要性。在孔径低于30美元$ $ m的孔径下,大多数毛孔仍然塌陷。我们将大多数小毛孔塌陷的持久性归因于较低的空化概率和孔壁的粘附。直径大于100 $ $ m的毛孔在水中含有洞穴后会重新打开。直径范围为30至100 $μm的孔的行为取决于孔隙度和干燥温度。我们还可以在最初用氯化钠溶液饱和的海绵干燥时可视化集体气蚀。在这种情况下,最大的毛孔中的空化导致样品相邻区域中的小孔重新开放。据我们所知,我们的结果介绍了孔隙大小依赖性和合作性的第一个实验证明,其孔隙孔对干燥的软海绵反应的反应。
In this paper, we study the drying of water-saturated porous polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) elastomers with closed porosity in which the evaporation of water is possible only via the diffusion across the PDMS. Starting from water/PDMS emulsions, we fabricate soft macroporous samples with different pore diameter distributions and average diameters ranging from 10 to 300 $μ$m. In these materials, the drying may lead either to a collapsed state with low porosity or to the cavitation and reopening of a fraction of the pores. Using optical microscopy and porosity measurements, we showed the importance of the pore diameters and interactions on the result of drying. At pore diameters lower than 30 $μ$m, the majority of pores remain collapsed. We attribute the permanence of the collapse of most small pores to a low probability of cavitation and to the adhesion of the pore walls. Pores with diameters larger than 100 $μ$m tend to reopen after the water they contain cavitates. The behavior of pores with diameters ranging from 30 to 100 $μ$m depends on the porosity and drying temperature. We also visualize collective cavitation upon drying of sponges initially saturated with a sodium chloride solution. In this case, the cavitation in the largest pores leads to reopening of small pores in a neighboring zone of the sample. To our knowledge, our results present the first experimental proof of the pore-size-dependent and cooperative nature of the response of soft sponges with closed porosity to drying.