Manipulation of micrometer-scale adhesion by tuning nanometer-scale surface features

被引:59
作者
Kozlova, N [1 ]
Santore, MM [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Polymer Sci & Engn, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/la0515221
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
This article demonstrates how the adhesion rates of micrometer-scale particles on a planar surface can be manipulated by nanometer-scale features on the latter. Here, similar to 500-nm-diameter spherical silica particles carrying a substantial and relatively uniform negative charge experienced competing attractions and repulsions as they approached and attempted to adhere to a negative planar silica surface carrying flat 11-nm-diameter patches of concentrated positive charge. The average spacing of these patches profoundly influenced the particle adhesion. For dense positive patch spacing on the planar collector, the particle adhesion was rapid, and the fundamental adhesion kinetics were masked by particle transport to the interface. For patch densities corresponding to a planar surface with net zero charge, particle adhesion was still rapid. Adhesion kinetics were observably reduced for patch spacings exceeding 20 nm and become slower with increased patch spacing. Ultimately, above a critical or threshold average patch spacing of 32 nm, no particle adhesion occurred. The presence of the threshold average patch spacing suggests that more than one positive surface patch was needed for particle capture under the particular conditions of this study. Furthermore, at the threshold, the length scales of the patch spacing and of the interactive surface area between the particle and the surface become similar: The concept of adhesion dominated by the matching of length scales is reminiscent of pattern recognition, even though the patch distribution on the collector is random in this work. Indeed, fluctuations play a critical role in these adhesion dynamics, hence the current behavior cannot be predicted by a mean field approach.
引用
收藏
页码:1135 / 1142
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Mesoporous silica with micrometer-scale designs [J].
Yang, H ;
Coombs, N ;
Ozin, GA .
ADVANCED MATERIALS, 1997, 9 (10) :811-&
[22]   Generation of chrome masks with micrometer-scale features using microlens lithography [J].
Wu, H ;
Odom, TW ;
Whitesides, GM .
ADVANCED MATERIALS, 2002, 14 (17) :1213-+
[23]   Continuing observations of nanometer-scale surface properties. [J].
Weiss, PS ;
Arnold, JJ ;
Bumm, LA ;
Cygan, MT ;
Stranick, SJ ;
Dunbar, T ;
Allara, DL ;
Burgin, T ;
Jones, L ;
Tour, JM .
ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1996, 211 :101-COLL
[24]   Shaping nanometer-scale architecture through surface chemistry [J].
Saponjic, ZV ;
Dimitrijevic, NM ;
Tiede, DM ;
Goshe, AJ ;
Zuo, XB ;
Chen, LX ;
Barnard, AS ;
Zapol, P ;
Curtiss, L ;
Rajh, T .
ADVANCED MATERIALS, 2005, 17 (08) :965-+
[25]   SURFACE MODIFICATION OF NANOMETER-SCALE SILVER PARTICLES BY IMIDAZOLE [J].
VUKOVIC, VV ;
NEDELJKOVIC, JM .
LANGMUIR, 1993, 9 (04) :980-983
[26]   FIELD-INDUCED NANOMETER-SCALE TO ATOMIC-SCALE MANIPULATION OF SILICON SURFACES WITH THE STM [J].
LYO, IW ;
AVOURIS, P .
SCIENCE, 1991, 253 (5016) :173-176
[27]   Nanometer-Scale HfOx RRAM [J].
Zhang, Zhiping ;
Wu, Yi ;
Wong, H. -S. Philip ;
Wong, S. Simon .
IEEE ELECTRON DEVICE LETTERS, 2013, 34 (08) :1005-1007
[28]   NANOTRIBOLOGY - FRICTION ON A NANOMETER-SCALE [J].
MARTI, O .
PHYSICA SCRIPTA, 1993, T49B :599-604
[29]   NANOMETER-SCALE FEATURES PRODUCED BY ELECTRIC-FIELD EMISSION [J].
MCBRIDE, SE ;
WETSEL, GC .
APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 1991, 59 (23) :3056-3058
[30]   NANOMETROLOGY NIST scatterfield imaging 'sees' nanometer-scale features [J].
Overton, Gail .
LASER FOCUS WORLD, 2016, 52 (01) :36-+