Quantifying droplet-solid friction using an atomic force microscope

Xue Qi Koh, Calvin Thenarianto, Ville Jokinen, Dan Daniel

PDF
Droplet ›› 2024, Vol. 3 ›› Issue (2) : 107. DOI: 10.1002/dro2.107
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Quantifying droplet-solid friction using an atomic force microscope

Author information +
History +

Abstract

Controlling the wetting and spreading of microdroplets is key to technologies such as microfluidics, ink-jet printing, and surface coating. Contact angle goniometry is commonly used to characterize surface wetting by droplets, but the technique is ill-suited for high contact angles close to 180°. Here, we attach a micrometric-sized droplet to an atomic force microscope cantilever to directly quantify droplet-solid friction on different surfaces (superhydrophobic and underwater superoleophobic) with sub-nanonewton force resolutions. We demonstrate the versatility of our approach by performing friction measurements using different liquids (water and oil droplets) and under different ambient environments (in air and underwater). Finally, we show that underwater superoleophobic surfaces can be qualitatively different from superhydrophobic surfaces: droplet-solid friction is highly sensitive to droplet speeds for the former but not for the latter surface.

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Xue Qi Koh, Calvin Thenarianto, Ville Jokinen, Dan Daniel. Quantifying droplet-solid friction using an atomic force microscope. Droplet, 2024, 3(2): 107 https://doi.org/10.1002/dro2.107

RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS

2024 2024 The Authors. Droplet published by Jilin University and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.
PDF

Accesses

Citations

Detail

Sections
Recommended

/