| Literature DB >> 27510557 |
Abhimanyu Rana1, Abhijeet Patra2, Meenakshi Annamalai1, Amar Srivastava1, Siddhartha Ghosh1, Kelsey Stoerzinger3, Yueh-Lin Lee3, Saurav Prakash2, Reuben Yeo Jueyuan4, Partho S Goohpattader4, Nalam Satyanarayana4, Kalon Gopinadhan1, Michal M Dykas2, Kingshuk Poddar2, Surajit Saha1, Tarapada Sarkar1, Brijesh Kumar1, Charanjit S Bhatia4, Livia Giordano5, Yang Shao-Horn3, T Venkatesan6.
Abstract
In this manuscript, we demonstrate a method based on atomic force microscopy which enables local probing of surface wettability. The maximum pull-off force, obtained from force spectroscopy shows a remarkable correlation with the macroscopically observed water contact angle, measured over a wide variety of surfaces starting from hydrophilic, all the way through to hydrophobic ones. This relationship, consequently, facilitates the establishment of a universal behaviour. The adhesion forces scale with the polar component of surface energy. However, no such relation could be established with the dispersive component. Hence, we postulate that the force(s) which enable us to correlate the force spectroscopy data measured on the nanoscale to the macroscopic contact angle are primarily arising from electrostatic-dipole-dipole interactions at the solid-liquid interface. London forces play less of a role. This effect in is line with density functional theory (DFT) calculations suggesting a higher degree of hydroxylation of hydrophilic surfaces. This result shows that molecular simulations and measurements on an atomic scale can be extrapolated to macroscopic surface wetting problems.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27510557 DOI: 10.1039/c6nr02076c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale ISSN: 2040-3364 Impact factor: 7.790