Home

druppelpatroon

Druppelpatroon is a Dutch term used to describe the spatial arrangement or pattern of droplets produced by spraying, dripping, or deposition on a surface. The word combines druppel (drop) and patroon (pattern), and the concept is used across several technical fields to characterize how droplets are distributed.

In printing and coating, a druppelpatroon refers to how ink or coating droplets are laid down on

In agriculture and horticulture, the term describes the distribution of spray or irrigation droplets on plants

In research and quality control, druppelpatroon is analyzed to assess deposition quality. Measurements include droplet size

Overall, druppelpatroon is a descriptive, multidisciplinary concept used to evaluate and optimize how droplets are arranged

a
substrate.
Patterns
can
be
regular,
such
as
grid
or
hexagonal
arrangements,
or
irregular,
depending
on
nozzle
geometry,
substrate
wettability,
fluid
properties,
and
process
parameters.
The
final
pattern
affects
visual
quality,
color
uniformity,
and
layer
thickness.
Factors
such
as
viscosity,
surface
tension,
evaporation,
and
contact-line
pinning
influence
pattern
formation,
along
with
the
roughness
and
chemistry
of
the
surface.
or
soil.
An
even
druppelpatroon
improves
coverage
and
uptake
while
reducing
runoff,
drift,
and
wastage.
Uniform
patterns
may
be
hard
to
achieve
in
windy
conditions
or
on
complex
plant
canopies,
necessitating
adjustments
in
nozzle
types,
pressure,
and
sprayer
geometry.
distribution,
density,
and
spatial
statistics
(such
as
regularity
or
clustering).
Imaging
and
optical
techniques
are
commonly
used
to
quantify
patterns
and
guide
process
optimization.
on
surfaces
in
both
industrial
and
agricultural
contexts.