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Dive into the research topics where David Seveno is active.

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Featured researches published by David Seveno.


Langmuir | 2009

Dynamics of Wetting Revisited

David Seveno; Alexandre Vaillant; Romain Rioboo; H Adão; J. Conti; J. De Coninck

We present new spreading-drop data obtained over four orders of time and apply our new analysis tool G-Dyna to demonstrate the specific range over which the various models of dynamic wetting would seem to apply for our experimental system. We follow the contact angle and radius dynamics of four liquids on the smooth silica surface of silicon wafers or PET from the first milliseconds to several seconds. Analysis of the images allows us to make several hundred contact angle and droplet radius measurements with great accuracy. The G-Dyna software is then used to fit the data to the relevant theory (hydrodynamic, molecular-kinetic theory, Petrov and De Ruijter combined models, and Shikhmurzaevs formula). The distributions, correlations, and average values of the free parameters are analyzed and it is shown that for the systems studied even with very good data and a robust fitting procedure, it may be difficult to make reliable claims as to the model which best describes results for a given system. This conclusions also suggests that claims based on smaller data sets and less stringent fitting procedures should be treated with caution.


Langmuir | 2010

Superhydrophobic Aluminum Surfaces by Deposition of Micelles of Fluorinated Block Copolymers

Simon Desbief; Bruno Grignard; Christophe Detrembleur; Romain Rioboo; Alexandre Vaillant; David Seveno; Michel Voué; Joël De Coninck; Alain M. Jonas; Christine Jérôme; Pascal Damman; Roberto Lazzaroni

Superhydrophobic surfaces are generated by chemisorption on aluminum substrates of fluorinated block copolymers synthesized by reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer in supercritical carbon dioxide. In an appropriate solvent, those block copolymers can form micelles with a fluorinated corona, which are grafted on the aluminum substrate thanks to the presence of carboxylic acid groups in the corona. Water contact angle and drop impact analysis were used to characterize the wettability of the films at the macroscale, and atomic force microscopy measurements provided morphological information at the micro- and nanoscale. The simple solvent casting of the polymer solution on a hydroxylated aluminum surface results in a coating with multiscale roughness, which is fully superhydrophobic over areas up to 4 cm(2).


Langmuir | 2008

Superhydrophobic surfaces from various polypropylenes

Romain Rioboo; Michel Voué; Alexandre Vaillant; David Seveno; J. Conti; A. I. Bondar; D. A. Ivanov; J. De Coninck

Superhydrophobic surfaces were prepared from solutions of isotactic polypropylenes of various molecular weights using soft chemistry. Varying the conditions of the experiments (polymer concentration and initial amount of the coated solution) allowed us to optimize the superhydrophobic behavior of the polymer film. Results show that decreasing the concentration and/or film thicknesses decreases the probability to get superhydrophobicity for all polypropylenes tested. Measurement and analysis of advancing and receding contact angles as well as estimation of surface homogeneity were performed. Similar results were obtained with syndio- as well as atactic polypropylenes.


Langmuir | 2011

Experimental Evidence of the Role of Viscosity in the Molecular Kinetic Theory of Dynamic Wetting

D. Duvivier; David Seveno; Romain Rioboo; T. D. Blake; J. De Coninck

We report an experimental study of the dynamics of spontaneous spreading of aqueous glycerol drops on glass. For a range of glycerol concentrations, we follow the evolution of the radius and contact angle over several decades of time and investigate the influence of solution viscosity. The application of the molecular kinetic theory to the resulting data allows us to extract the coefficient of contact-line friction ζ, the molecular jump frequency κ(0), and the jump length λ for each solution. Our results show that the modified theory, which explicitly accounts for the effect of viscosity, can successfully be applied to droplet spreading. The viscosity affects the jump frequency but not the jump length. In combining these data, we confirm that the contact-line friction of the solution/air interface against the glass is proportional to the viscosity and exponentially dependent on the work of adhesion.


Langmuir | 2010

Drop Impact on Soft Surfaces: Beyond the Static Contact Angles

Romain Rioboo; Michel Voué; Helena Adão; J. Conti; Alexandre Vaillant; David Seveno; Joël De Coninck

The wettability of cross-linked poly(dimethylsiloxane) elastomer films and of octadecyltrichlorosilane self-assembled monolayers with water has been measured and compared using various methods. Contact angle hysteresis values were compared with values reported in the literature. A new method to characterize advancing, receding contact angles, and hysteresis using drop impact have been tested and compared with usual methods. It has been found that for the rigid surfaces the drop impact method is comparable with other methods but that for elastomer surfaces the hysteresis is function of the drop impact velocity which influences the extent of the deformation of the soft surface at the triple line.


Langmuir | 2011

Predicting the Wetting Dynamics of a Two-Liquid System

David Seveno; T. D. Blake; S. Goossens; J. De Coninck

We propose a new theoretical model of dynamic wetting for systems comprising two immiscible liquids, in which one liquid displaces another from the surface of a solid. Such systems are important in many industrial processes and the natural world. The new model is an extension of the molecular-kinetic theory of wetting and offers a way to predict the dynamics of a two-liquid system from the individual wetting dynamics of its parent liquids. We also present the results of large-scale molecular dynamics simulations for one- and two-liquid systems and show them to be in good agreement with the new model. Finally, we show that the new model is consistent with the limited data currently available from experiment.


Langmuir | 2010

Wetting Dynamics of Drop Spreading. New Evidence for the Microscopic Validity of the Molecular-Kinetic Theory

David Seveno; N Dinter; J. De Coninck

We study the spontaneous wetting of liquid drops on FCC solid substrates using large-scale molecular dynamics simulations. By varying the solid lattice parameter, five different drop/solid dynamic systems are investigated. It is shown that the results are in agreement with the molecular-kinetic theory (MKT) describing the dynamics of wetting. Moreover, it is established that the microscopic parameters resulting from fits using the MKT, the so-called molecular jump frequency at equilibrium and the jump length, correspond to the values that can be estimated directly from the simulations. This agreement strongly supports the validity of the MKT at the microscopic scale.


Langmuir | 2011

Can we predict the spreading of a two-liquid system from the spreading of the corresponding liquid-air systems?

S. Goossens; David Seveno; Romain Rioboo; Alexandre Vaillant; J. Conti; J. De Coninck

We present new data obtained from the spreading of a series of oil droplets, on top of a hydrophobic grafted silicon substrate, in air and immersed in water. We follow the contact angle and radius dynamics of hexane, dodecane, hexadecane, dibutyl phthalate, and squalane from the first milliseconds to approximately 1 s. Analysis of the images allows us to make several hundred contact angle and droplet radius measurements with great accuracy. The G-Dyna (Seveno et al. Langmuir 2010, 25, 13034) software is then used to fit the data with one of the wetting theories, the molecular-kinetic theory (MKT) (Blake et al. J. Colloid Interface Sci.1969, 30, 421), which takes into account the dissipation at the three-phase zone at the contact line. This theory allows us to extract the coefficient of friction of the contact line, which expresses the relationship between the driving force, that is, the unbalanced Young force, and the contact-line velocity V. It is first shown that the MKT is appropriate to describe the experimental data and then that the contact-line friction is a linear function of the viscosity as theoretically predicted. This is checked for oil-air and oil-water systems. A linear relation between the contact-line friction measured in oil-water systems and the contact-line frictions of the parent single liquid system seems plausible. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first trial to establish a link between the dynamics of wetting in liquid-liquid and in liquid-air systems.


Langmuir | 2016

Wettability of a Single Carbon Fiber

Si Qiu; C.A. Fuentes; Dongxing Zhang; Aart Willem Van Vuure; David Seveno

Wettability as determined from contact angle measurements is a suitable parameter for characterizing the physical bonding of a polymer matrix and reinforcing fibers, but it is very challenging to measure the capillary force exerted by a probe liquid on a fiber accurately for very fine fibers such as single carbon fibers. Herein, we propose an innovative method for measuring dynamic contact angles with a tensiometer, considering both the intrinsic variability of the carbon fiber diameter and the extremely small amplitude of the capillary forces, allowing the measurement of reliable dynamic contact angles over a large range of contact line velocities. The analysis of the contact angle dynamics by the molecular-kinetic theory permits us to check the relevancy of the measured contact angles and to obtain the static contact angle value, improving the prospect of employing tensiometry to better understand the wetting behavior of carbon fibers.


Langmuir | 2017

Spreading Dynamics of Molten Polymer Drops on Glass Substrates

Yichuan Zhang; C.A. Fuentes; Robin Koekoekx; Christian Clasen; Aart Willem Van Vuure; Joël De Coninck; David Seveno

Wetting dynamics drive numerous processes involving liquids in contact with solid substrates with a wide range of geometries. The spreading dynamics of organic liquids and liquid metals at, respectively, room temperature and >1000 °C have been studied extensively, both experimentally and numerically; however, almost no attention has been paid to the wetting behavior of molten drops of thermoplastic polymers, despite its importance, for example, in the processing of fiber-reinforced polymer composites. Indeed, the ability of classical theories of dynamic wetting, that is, the hydrodynamic and the molecular-kinetic theories, to model these complex liquids is unknown. We have therefore investigated the spreading dynamics on glass, over temperatures between 200 and 260 °C, of two thermoplastics: polypropylene (PP) and poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF). PP and PVDF showed, respectively, the highest and lowest slip lengths due to their different interactions with the glass substrate. The jump lengths of PP and PVDF are comparable to their Kuhn segment lengths, suggesting that the wetting process of these polymers is mediated by segmental displacements. The present work not only provides evidence of the suitability of the classical models to model dynamic wetting of molten polymers but also advances our understanding of the wetting dynamics of molten thermoplastics at the liquid/solid interface.

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Dive into the David Seveno's collaboration.

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Joël De Coninck

University of Mons-Hainaut

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Aart Willem Van Vuure

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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T. D. Blake

University of Mons-Hainaut

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Michel Voué

University of Mons-Hainaut

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G Martic

University of Mons-Hainaut

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Fabien Gentner

University of Mons-Hainaut

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