Liquid-liquid extraction – the transfer of a solute from one solvent to another – is one of the core processes in chemical technology and analysis. The current challenge is to miniaturise the extraction process of the analyte and to optimize the extraction recovery and preconcentration factor. In lack of a priori calculations, this has traditionally been done by trial-and-error. However, to be able to control and optimize the extraction processes, it is crucial to quantitatively understand the diffusive droplet dynamics in multicomponent fluid systems. This is essential and urgently needed not only for modern liquid-liquid extraction processes for diagnostics and microanalysis, for droplet microfluidics, or in the paint & coating industry, but on larger scales also in the remediation industry, in chemical technology, or in food processing. These applications of droplets governed by diffusion include cases of immersed droplets in the bulk and on a surface, single and multicomponent droplets and solvents, growing or shrinking droplets, and cases with high droplet number density.
The objective of the project was to better understand these multiphase and multicomponent fluid systems with relevant diffusive droplet dynamics, filling the gap and coming to a quantitative understanding of diffusive droplet dynamics and thus to illuminate the fundamental fluid dynamics of diffusive processes of immersed (multicomponent) (surface) droplets on multiple scales.