Project Details
Dynamic Electrowetting at Nanoporous Surfaces: Switchable Spreading, Imbibition, and Elastocapillarity
Applicant
Professor Dr. Patrick Huber
Subject Area
Experimental Condensed Matter Physics
Physical Chemistry of Molecules, Liquids and Interfaces, Biophysical Chemistry
Physical Chemistry of Molecules, Liquids and Interfaces, Biophysical Chemistry
Term
from 2019 to 2024
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 422879465
Electrically conductive substrates, such as surfaces of nanoporous metals and semiconductors allow one to control the wetting energies of electrolytes by electrical potentials. Thereby, it is possible to tune droplet shape and liquid spreading dynamics at surfaces, however also the imbibition into the porous surface is under external control via electrical potential-dependent curvatures of the liquid menisci within the nanopores. Moreover, the enormous Laplace pressures and fluid-solid interfacial stresses, typical of nanopore-confined liquids, induce noticeable deformations of the porous solids, and thus result in the case of electrowetting in a potential-dependent coupling of liquid capillarity with solid elasticity, i.e. electrically switchable elastocapillarity. The complex interplay of these phenomenologies (droplet shape dynamics, imbibition and deformation behaviour) have been barely explored to date. Here, it is proposed to explore experimentally the wetting dynamics of aqueous electrolytes at tailored, single-crystalline silicon surfaces traversed by a parallel array of tubular nanopores along with the intimately related elastic deformation of the solids under electrical potential control of the solid-liquid interfacial tension. Both direct and electrowetting with dielectric oxide layers at the nanopore surfaces shall be studied. The existence of precursor films, droplet spreading and imbibition dynamics as well as the deformation on the microscopic (atomic silicon lattice) and macroscopic (substrate) scale will be scrutinized by time-dependent droplet shape analysis, opto-fluidic interferometry, dilatometry and synchrotron-based in-situ x-ray diffraction under variation of the mean pore diameter and porosity of the surface. The experiments shall be analysed in close cooperation with projects in this priority program focusing on computational modelling and mesoscopic phenomenological theories for liquid spreading, imbibition and elastocapillarity at planar and porous surfaces. The overarching objective of this project is a fundamental, predictive understanding of electrically switchable static and dynamic wetting at nanoporous surfaces.
DFG Programme
Priority Programmes