• Title of article

    Wetting transitions of simple liquid films adsorbed on selfassembled monolayer substrates: an ellipsometric study

  • Author/Authors

    Batchelder، D. N. نويسنده , , Cheng، Y. L. نويسنده , , Evans، S. D. نويسنده , , Henderson، J. R. نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
  • Pages
    -806
  • From page
    807
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    We report on an ellipsometric experimental study designed to explore the relevance of the wetting phase diagram predicted by liquid state physics of basic models, to the wide class of simple organic liquid films that adsorb from saturated vapour onto planar substrates at room temperature. The wetting properties are explored by measuring adsorption isotherms in the approach to saturation, in particular, for adsorption of n hexane on a variety of specially constructed substrates (self-assembled monolayers) spanning a wide range of surface energy, and by carrying out the microscopic equivalent of contact angle experiments at saturation. We locate a wetting transition, which in our case is continuous, and then study its properties in detail. The general prediction of the wetting phase diagram, that wetting transitions should be ubiquitous in nature and readily located via control over the substrate field, is supported by our data, but the quantitative nature of the thick film adsorption regime is not in agreement with Lifshitz theory. This conclusion supports the work of a variety of earlier related studies, but contrasts with recent results for adsorption onto the surface of water. In addition, the correlation length determined from our complete wetting adsorption isotherms is mesoscopic, suggesting that equilibrium statistical mechanics of simple models of inhomogeneous fluids cannot explain the data.
  • Keywords
    Chemical synthesis , Infrared spectroscopy , Fullerenes , Organic compounds , Electronic paramagnetic resonance (EPR)
  • Journal title
    MOLECULAR PHYSICS
  • Serial Year
    2000
  • Journal title
    MOLECULAR PHYSICS
  • Record number

    42114