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. 2021 Jul 13;37(27):8139-8147.
doi: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c00689. Epub 2021 Jun 28.

Conversion of Polymer Surfaces into Nonwetting Substrates for Liquid Metal Applications

Affiliations

Conversion of Polymer Surfaces into Nonwetting Substrates for Liquid Metal Applications

Sachin Babu et al. Langmuir. .

Abstract

Liquid metal-based applications are limited by the wetting nature of polymers toward surface-oxidized gallium-based liquid metals. This work demonstrates that a 120 s CF4/O2 plasma treatment of polymer surfaces-such as poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS), SU8, S1813, and polyimide-converts these previously wetting surfaces to nonwetting surfaces for gallium-based liquid metals. Static and advancing contact angles of all plasma-treated surfaces are >150°, and receding contact angles are >140°, with contact angle hysteresis in the range of 8.2-10.7°, collectively indicating lyophobic behavior. This lyophobic behavior is attributed to the plasma simultaneously fluorinating the surface while creating sub-micron scale roughness. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) results show a large presence of fluorine at the surface, indicating fluorination of surface methyl groups, while atomic force microscopy (AFM) results show that plasma-treated surfaces have an order of magnitude greater surface roughness than pristine surfaces, indicating a Cassie-Baxter state, which suggests that surface roughness is the primary cause of the nonwetting property, with surface chemistry making a smaller contribution. Solid surface free energy values for all plasma-treated surfaces were found to be generally lower than the pristine surfaces, indicating that this process can be used to make similar classes of polymers nonwetting to gallium-based liquid metals.

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