A molecular dynamics study of superspreading
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The ongoing doctoral research project of
Jonathan D. Halverson1
With the faculty advisement of
J. Koplik2,3, A. Couzis1, C. Maldarelli1,3
Department of Chemical Engineering1, Department of Physics2
The Benjamin Levich Institute for Physico-chemical Hydrodynamics3
The City College and The Graduate Center of
The City University of New York
New York, NY 10031
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Abstract
Trisiloxane surfactants promote the complete and rapid wetting
of aqueous droplets on very hydrophobic substrates. The phenomena is so dramatic
that it has been termed superspreading. The focus of this work is to understand
the mechanism of superspreading. All-atom parallel molecular
dynamics simulations with full electrostatic interactions have been performed.
A spherical nanodroplet consisting of 9997 water molecules and 475 surfactant
molecules is placed in the vicinity of a graphite substrate and allowed to spread
freely at 298 K. In the case of the superspreading surfactant or TSE4, the
surfactant is found to exclude water from the substrate by packing the trisiloxane
tail groups tightly. To help illustrate the difference between conventional
surfactants and superspreaders, a polyethoxylate droplet has also been studied.
In this case, the C12E4 surfactant molecules are unable to pack as tightly at
the solid-liquid interface. This leads to a high-energy interface due in part to
the fact that water molecules at this surface have fewer hydrogen bonds than
those in the bulk. It is believed that the removal of water from this interface
is a key to superspreading. We report the hydrogen bonding structure and density
profiles of the solid-liquid interface, the area per molecule, and the
spreading rate.
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Last updated on Monday, October 9, 2006 at 02:30:00 PM EST
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