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Transient responses of a wetting film to mechanical and electrical perturbations

journal contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by R Manica, J Connor, L Clasohm, S Carnie, Roger Horn, D Chan
This article reports real-time observations and detailed modeling of the transient response of thin aqueous films bounded by a deformable surface to external mechanical and electrical perturbations. Such films, tens to hundreds of nanometers thick, are confined between a molecularly smooth mica plate and a deformable mercury/electrolyte interface on a protuberant drop at a sealed capillary tube. When the mercury is negatively charged, the water forms a wetting film on mica, stabilized by electrical double layer forces. Mechanical perturbations are produced by driving the mica plate toward or by retracting the mica plate from the mercury surface. Electrical perturbations are applied to change the electrical double layer interaction between the mica and the mercury by imposing a step change of the bias voltage between the mercury and the bulk electrolyte. A theoretical model has been developed that can account for these observations quantitatively. Comparison between experiments and theory indicates that a no-slip hydrodynamic boundary condition holds at the molecularly smooth mica/electrolyte surface and at the deformable mercury/electrolyte interface. An analysis of the transient response based on the model elucidates the complex interplay between disjoining pressure, hydrodynamic forces, and surface deformations. This study also provides insight into the mechanism and process of droplet coalescence and reveals a novel, counterintuitive mechanism that can lead to film instability and collapse when an attempt is made to thicken the film by pulling the bounding mercury and mica phases apart.

History

Journal

Langmuir

Volume

24

Issue

4

Season

Special issue : Molecular and surface forces

Pagination

1381 - 1390

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Location

Washington, D. C.

ISSN

0743-7463

eISSN

1520-5827

Language

eng

Notes

First published online 27th July, 2007

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, American Chemical Society

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