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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_angle
Contact angle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The contact angle is the angle, conventionally measured through the liquid, where a liquid/vapor interface meets a solid surface. It quantifies the wettability of a solid surface by a liquid via the Young equation. A given system of solid, liquid, and vapor at a given temperature and pressure has a unique equilibrium contact angle. However, in practice contact angle hysteresis is observed, ranging from the so-called advancing (maximal) contact angle to the receding (minimal) contact angle. The equilibrium contact is within those values, and can be calculated from them. The equilibrium contact angle reflects the relative strength of the liquid, solid, and vapor molecular interaction.
Super hydrophobic surface achieving 150+ deg contact angle. Surface was prepared using plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition using a plasma technology system Aurora.
Contents
1 Thermodynamics 1.1 Hysteresis 1.2 Dynamic Contact Angles 2 Typical contact angles 3 Measuring methods 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading
Thermodynamics
The shape of a liquid/vapor interface is determined by the Young Laplace equation, with the contact angle playing the role of a boundary condition via Young's Equation. The theoretical description of contact arises from the consideration of a thermodynamic equilibrium between the three phases: the liquid phase (L), the solid phase (S), and the gas/vapor phase (G) (which could be a mixture of ambient atmosphere and an equilibrium concentration of the liquid vapor). The gaseous phase could also be another (immiscible) liquid phase. If the solidvapor interfacial energy is denoted by , the solidliquid interfacial energy by , and the liquidvapor interfacial energy (i.e. the surface tension) by , then the equilibrium contact angle is determined from these quantities by Young's Equation:
Cloth, treated to be hydrophobic, shows a high contact angle.
The contact angle can also be related to the work of adhesion via the Young-Dupr equation:
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where
is the solid - liquid adhesion energy per unit area when in the medium V.
Hysteresis
On a surface that is rough or contaminated, Young's equation is still locally valid, but the equilibrium contact angle may vary from place to place on the surface.[1] According to the Young-Dupr equation, this means that the adhesion energy varies locally thus, the liquid has to overcome local energy barriers in order to wet the surface. One consequence of these barriers is contact angle hysteresis: the extent of wetting, and therefore the observed contact angle (averaged along the contact line), depend on whether the liquid is advancing or receding on the surface. Since liquid advances over previously dry surface but recedes from previously wet surface, contact angle hysteresis can also arise if the solid has been altered due to its previous contact with the liquid (e.g., by a chemical reaction, or absorption). Such alterations, if slow, can also produce measurably time-dependent contact angles. The highest observed contact angle is the advancing angle angle . The contact angle hysteresis is . , and the lowest observed contact angle is the receding
The Young equation assumes a perfectly flat surface. Even in such a smooth surface a drop will assume contact angle hysteresis. The equilibrium contact angle ( ) can be calculated from and as was shown theoretically by [2] [3] Tadmor and confirmed experimentally by Chibowski as,
where
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minus their given value. Contact angles are equally applicable to the interface of two liquids, though they are more commonly measured in solid products such as non-stick pans and waterproof fabrics.
Image from a video contact angle device. Water drop on glass, with reflection below.
A water drop on a lotus leaf surface showing contact angles of approximately 147.
Measuring methods
The static sessile drop method The sessile drop method is measured by a contact angle goniometer using an optical subsystem to capture the profile of a pure liquid on a solid substrate. The angle formed between the liquid/solid interface and the liquid/vapor interface is the contact angle. Older systems used a microscope optical system with a back light. Current-generation systems employ high resolution cameras and software to capture and analyze the contact angle. The dynamic sessile drop method The dynamic sessile drop is similar to the static sessile drop but requires the drop to be modified. A common type of dynamic sessile drop study determines the largest contact angle possible without increasing its solid/liquid interfacial area by adding volume dynamically. This A contact angle goniometer is used to maximum angle is the advancing angle. Volume is removed to produce measure the contact angle. the smallest possible angle, the receding angle. The difference between the advancing and receding angle is the contact angle hysteresis. Dynamic Wilhelmy method A method for calculating average advancing and receding contact angles on solids of uniform geometry. Both sides of the solid must have the same properties. Wetting force on the solid is measured as the solid is immersed in or withdrawn from a liquid of known surface tension. Dynamic sessile drop method Single-fiber Wilhelmy method Dynamic Wilhelmy method applied to single fibers to measure advancing and receding contact angles. Powder contact angle method Enables measurement of average contact angle and sorption speed for powders and other porous materials. Change of weight as a function of time is measured.
See also
Goniometer Meniscus
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References
1. ^ de Gennes, P.G. (1985). "Wetting: statics and dynamics". Reviews of Modern Physics 57: 827863. Bibcode 1985RvMP...57..827D (http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1985RvMP...57..827D) . doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.57.827 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1103%2FRevModPhys.57.827) . 2. ^ Tadmor, Rafael (2004). "Line energy and the relation between advancing, receding and Young contact angles". Langmuir 20 (18): 7659. doi:10.1021/la049410h (http://dx.doi.org/10.1021%2Fla049410h) . PMID 15323516 (//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15323516) . 3. ^ Chibowski, Emil (2008). "Surface free energy of sulfurRevisited I. Yellow and orange samples solidified against glass surface". Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 319: 505. doi:10.1016/j.jcis.2007.10.059 (http://dx.doi.org /10.1016%2Fj.jcis.2007.10.059) . 4. ^ a b Zisman, W.A. (1964). F. Fowkes. ed. Contact Angle, Wettability, and Adhesion. ACS. pp. 151. 5. ^ Renate Frch, Holger Schnherr, A. Tobias A. Jenkins (2009). Surface design: applications in bioscience and nanotechnology (http://books.google.com/?id=cvn5l-QytVIC&pg=PA471) . Wiley-VCH. p. 471. ISBN 3-527-40789-8. http://books.google.com/?id=cvn5l-QytVIC&pg=PA471.
Further reading
Pierre-Gilles de Gennes, Franoise Brochard-Wyart, David Qur, Capillarity and Wetting Phenomena: Drops, Bubbles, Pearls, Waves, Springer (2004) Jacob Israelachvili, Intermolecular and Surface Forces, Academic Press (19852004) D.W. Van Krevelen, Properties of Polymers, 2nd revised edition, Elsevier Scientific Publishing Company, Amsterdam-Oxford-New York (1976) Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Contact_angle&oldid=526328153" Categories: Condensed matter physics Angle Fluid mechanics Surface chemistry
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