| Literature DB >> 31983863 |
Maryam Raftari1, Zhenyu J Zhang2,3, Steven R Carter1, Graham J Leggett2, Mark Geoghegan1.
Abstract
The nanoscopic adhesive and frictional behaviour of end-grafted poly[2-(dimethyl amino)ethyl methacrylate] (PDMAEMA) films (brushes) in contact with gold- or PDMAEMA-coated atomic force microscope tips in potassium halide solutions with different concentrations up to 300 mM is a strong function of salt concentration. The conformation of the polymers in the brush layer is sensitive to salt concentration, which leads to large changes in adhesive forces and the contact mechanics at the tip-sample contact, with swollen brushes (which occur at low salt concentrations) yielding large areas of contact and friction-load plots that fit JKR behaviour, while collapsed brushes (which occur at high salt concentrations) yield sliding dominated by ploughing, with conformations in between fitting DMT mechanics. The relative effect of the different anions follows the Hofmeister series, with I- collapsing the brushes more than Br- and Cl- for the same salt concentration.Entities:
Keywords: Adhesion; Atomic force microscopy; Contact mechanics; Polyelectrolytes; Polymer films
Year: 2017 PMID: 31983863 PMCID: PMC6951817 DOI: 10.1007/s11249-017-0963-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tribol Lett ISSN: 1023-8883 Impact factor: 3.106
Fig. 1Ellipsometric thickness and swelling ratio of PDMAEMA brushes in different salt solutions. Unfilled symbols correspond to the swelling, filled symbols to the thickness. Error bars may be obscured by the relevant datum. Solid lines are guides for the eye
Fig. 2Retraction curves for the a gold-coated and b PDMAEMA brush-coated AFM tips from the PDMAEMA brush in different 300 mM salt solutions. The different slopes for the curves at small displacements indicate a different laser alignment of the sample
Fig. 3Histograms showing the number of events as a function of the pull-off force from the PDMAEMA brush in solutions of different salts for the a gold-coated and b PDMAEMA brush-coated AFM tips, as schematized in the insets. The salt concentration in each case was 300 mM
Fig. 4Pull-off force, N PO from the PDMAEMA brush for the a gold-coated and b PDMAEMA brush-coated AFM tips as a function of salt concentration for the three different salts used. Error bars may be obscured by the relevant datum
Fig. 5Friction–load curves for the a gold-coated and b PDMAEMA brush-coated AFM tips from the PDMAEMA brush. The legend is spread across both graphs
Fig. 6Salt concentration dependence of the transition parameter for the gold-coated tip in contact with a PDMAEMA brush in KCl, KBr, and KI solutions
Relative friction coefficients for gold- and PDMAEMA-coated tips in KI and KBr solutions (errors are less than 5%) determined from the slope of the friction–load plots
| Salt concentration (mM) | Au | PDMAEMA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| KBr | KI | KBr | KI | |
| 10 | 2.2 | 2.1 | ||
| 100 | 2.8 | 1.6 | 1.5 | |
| 300 | 2.6 | 2.2 | 1.3 | 1.0 |
These coefficients are relative to that of the PDMAEMA brush-coated tip at 300 mM KI, which was set to unity