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Article
Contact angle hysteresis: a different view and a trivial recipe for low hysteresis hydrophobic surfaces
Faraday Discussions (2010)
  • Joseph W. Krumpfer
  • Thomas J. McCarthy, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
Abstract

Contact angle hysteresis is addressed from two perspectives. The first is an analysis of the events that occur during motion of droplets on superhydrophobic surfaces. Hysteresis is discussed in terms of receding contact line pinning and the tensile failure of capillary bridges. The sign of the curvature of the solid surface is implicated as playing a key role. The second is the report of a new method to prepare smooth low hysteresis surfaces. The thermal treatment of oxygen plasma-cleaned silicon wafers with trimethylsilyl-terminated linear poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS - commercial silicone oils) in disposable glass vessels is described. This treatment renders silicon/silica surfaces that contain covalently attached PDMS chains. The grafted layers of nanometre scale thickness are liquid-like (rotationally dynamic at room temperature), decrease activation barriers for contact line motion and minimize water contact angle hysteresis. This simple method requires neither sophisticated techniques nor substantial laboratory skills to perform.

Disciplines
Publication Date
May 6, 2010
Publisher Statement
DOI: 10.1039/B925045J
Citation Information
Joseph W. Krumpfer and Thomas J. McCarthy. "Contact angle hysteresis: a different view and a trivial recipe for low hysteresis hydrophobic surfaces" Faraday Discussions Vol. 146 (2010)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/thomas_mccarthy1/4/