Optical absorbance profilometry for tracking time-resolved particle redistribution in high volume fraction colloidal droplets
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Abstract
AbstractThe distribution of components within colloidal suspensions is important in many complex biological and industrial fluids. A convenient method of measuring such distributions in low-volume-fraction suspensions is that of optical absorbance. Here we introduce a time-dependent validity criterion allowing extended use of optical absorbance to track colloidal distribution in high volume fraction suspensions. We define our validity criterion and show its use on a range of volume fractions from 15 to 55%, and also on larger micron sized particles, common for biological cells. Within the validity criterion, we establish the evaporative time duration in which the material’s intrinsic coefficient of extinction can be treated as constant. This method enables rapid, low-cost, time-based study of the advective flow of suspended particulates, enabling advection to be straightforwardly measured from digital imaging. The residue profile predicted using our method in two test systems is compared with conventional laser profilometry measurements of the final evaporated residue, with good agreement at most radial positions.
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Acknowledgements: Sheila J Bhatt gratefully acknowledges the Cambridge Institute for Energy and Environmental Flows for a PhD studentship supporting this work. Sheila J Bhatt dedicates this work to the late Jayant Ambalal Bhatt a believer in science and a seeker of knowledge. The authors thank Dr. Peter Smethurst for help with blood-sample preparation, Dr. Bart Hallmark, for formative discussions on light scattering, fluid-dynamics and rheology, Dr. Will Winter and Dr Stuart Holmes for valuable feedback and suggestions, and Dr. Edward Ward for discussions on lensing and scattering.

