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Adaptation of a Styrene-Acrylic Acid Copolymer Surface to Water

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Journal Langmuir
Specialty Chemistry
Date 2021 Jan 13
PMID 33439030
Citations 5
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Abstract

Solid surfaces, in particular polymer surfaces, are able to adapt upon contact with a liquid. Adaptation results in an increase in contact angle hysteresis and influences the mobility of sliding drops on surfaces. To study adaptation and its kinetics, we synthesized a random copolymer composed of styrene and 11-25 mol% acrylic acid (PS/PAA). We measured the dynamic advancing (θ) and receding (θ) contact angles of water drops sliding down a tilted plate coated with this polymer. We measured θ ≈ 87° for velocities of the contact line <20 μm/s. At higher velocities, θ gradually increased to ∼98°. This value is similar to θ of a pure polystyrene (PS) film, which we studied for comparison. We associate the gradual increase in θ to the adaptation process to water: The presence of water leads to swelling and/or an enrichment of acid groups at the water/polymer interface. By applying the latest adaptation theory (Butt et al. 2018, 34, 11292), we estimated the time constant of this adaptation process to be ≪1 s. For sliding water drops, θ is ∼10° lower compared to the reference PS surface for all tested velocities. Thus, at the receding side of a sliding drop, the surface is already enriched by acid groups. For a water drop with a width of 5 mm, the increase in contact angle hysteresis corresponds to an increase in capillary force in the range of 45-60 μN, depending on sliding velocity.

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