Hi everybody.
My goal is to design a process that, with no automated machinery (I'm using a mechanical pipette), would allow for extremely uniform coverage of a hydrophilic surface with a self assembled colloidal layer.
I am using a polymer suspension in water. Currently I'm taking a small microliter size portion of this stock suspension, diluting it by half and dripping it onto the surface of a substrate cut into exactly 1 cm2 squares. Then I let it dry.
Here is the problem. It is NOT uniform because the polymers are concentrated along the drying front; as water evaporates, the polymers do not, and get concentrated, yet diffusion of the polymers in water is much slower than evaporation (by my observations), and they get stuck on the edges.
I'm thinking of adding additives such as detergents or other polymers, changing temperature, or changing humidity, but would like a mathematical model to help guide my experiment. This is important because the theory of fabrication is a major component of the project.
how do I define the conditions such that the sample is dry and only the polymer remains? how do I calculate the distribution of the polymers on the surface? Is there an analytical model?
If no one can help directly, can anyone point me to a useful book to look at? I'd really like someone to point out a good introduction book to diffusion and mass transport, and would be even better if it was from a chemistry/physics point of view, rather than an engineering one.