TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecular Dynamics Study of the Microscopic Mechanical Balance at the Three-Phase Contact Line of Interfacial Nanobubble
AU - Jonosono, Yusuke
AU - Tsuda, Shin Ichi
AU - Tokumasu, Takashi
AU - Nagashima, Hiroki
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society
PY - 2024/4/23
Y1 - 2024/4/23
N2 - This study reveals the microscopic mechanical balance at the three-phase contact line (TPCL) of an interfacial nanobubble on a substrate with a wettability pattern using molecular dynamics simulations. The apparent contact angle was compared to that evaluated using Young’s equation, in which the interfacial tensions were computed using a mechanical route. The comparison was conducted by changing the wettability of the substrate from hydrophilic to neutral while maintaining a hydrophobic region in the center of the substrate. When the wettability pattern pins the TPCL at the wettability boundary, the contact angle computed by Young’s equation is larger than the apparent contact angle because a pinning force exists in the inward direction of the nanobubble. Conversely, on the surfaces where the wettability pattern does not pin the TPCL, the contact angle computed by Young’s equation agrees with the apparent contact angle because the pinning force disappears. The distribution of principal stresses around the TPCL, which was visualized for the first time in this study, indicates that large compressive principal stresses exist between the liquid phase and the solid substrate interface, which pin the TPCL at the surface wettability boundary, and that the maximum principal stress occurs in the inward direction of the nanobubbles at the TPCL. The normalized pinning force estimated from the maximum principal stress is equivalent to that measured experimentally.
AB - This study reveals the microscopic mechanical balance at the three-phase contact line (TPCL) of an interfacial nanobubble on a substrate with a wettability pattern using molecular dynamics simulations. The apparent contact angle was compared to that evaluated using Young’s equation, in which the interfacial tensions were computed using a mechanical route. The comparison was conducted by changing the wettability of the substrate from hydrophilic to neutral while maintaining a hydrophobic region in the center of the substrate. When the wettability pattern pins the TPCL at the wettability boundary, the contact angle computed by Young’s equation is larger than the apparent contact angle because a pinning force exists in the inward direction of the nanobubble. Conversely, on the surfaces where the wettability pattern does not pin the TPCL, the contact angle computed by Young’s equation agrees with the apparent contact angle because the pinning force disappears. The distribution of principal stresses around the TPCL, which was visualized for the first time in this study, indicates that large compressive principal stresses exist between the liquid phase and the solid substrate interface, which pin the TPCL at the surface wettability boundary, and that the maximum principal stress occurs in the inward direction of the nanobubbles at the TPCL. The normalized pinning force estimated from the maximum principal stress is equivalent to that measured experimentally.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.langmuir.3c04027
DO - 10.1021/acs.langmuir.3c04027
M3 - Article
C2 - 38604804
AN - SCOPUS:85190234518
SN - 0743-7463
VL - 40
SP - 8440
EP - 8449
JO - Langmuir
JF - Langmuir
IS - 16
ER -