posted on 1987-01-01, 00:00authored byH Christenson, D Gruen, Roger Horn, J Israelachvili
Measurements have been made of the solvation forces between mica surfaces in the even-numbered n-alkanes from hexane to hexadecane. In all cases the force law is qualitatively very similar, characterized by a decaying oscillatory function of distance, as occurs for simple isotropic liquids. The spacing between successive minima in the force does not increase with carbon number, and is comparable to the width of a linear alkane molecule rather than its length or any average diameter. This suggests that the alkanes have some tendency towards a parallel orientation near the mica surfaces. The measurements give no indication of any strong repulsive component expected from mean-field theories of higher alkanes or polymers. The results of one such theory are presented, and the reasons for its failure to match the experimental data are discussed.
History
Journal
Journal of chemical physics
Volume
87
Pagination
1834 - 1841
Location
New York, N. Y.
Open access
Yes
ISSN
0021-9606
eISSN
1089-7690
Language
eng
Notes
Reproduced with the kind permission of the copyright owner.