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Electrowetting measurements with mercury showing mercury / mica interfacial energy depends on charging

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by D Antelmi, Jason Connor, R Horn
We demonstrate that the interfacial energy between mercury and mica is a function of charge on the mercury surface, decreasing with increasing positive charge. The contact angle of mercury on mica has been measured as a function of potential applied to the mercury, which forms the working electrode of a cell containing either KCl or NaF electrolyte solution. At high negative applied potentials, a stable aqueous film exists between the mercury and mica surface. As potential is made less negative, the film collapses and mercury partially wets the mica at a critical potential, close to the electrocapillary maximum. Upon increasing the potential further (making the Hg surface more and more positive), the contact angle measured within the mercury continually decreases. Electrowetting with mercury is not unexpected since its interfacial tension with the aqueous phase is known to be a function of applied potential. However, the observed decrease goes against the trend expected from the Young equation if only this effect is considered. To explain the data we must allow the mercury/mica interfacial tension also to vary with applied potential. This variation indicates that the mercury surface is positively charged by contact with mica, consistent with known contact electrification between these two materials. The inherent charges at the mercury interfaces with mica and electrolyte solution result in contact angle changes of some tens of degrees with a change in applied potential of half a volt, orders of magnitude less than the potentials required to effect comparable changes in other electrowetting systems.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

108

Issue

3

Start Page

1030

End Page

1037

Number of Pages

8

ISSN

1520-6106

Location

United States

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

University of South Australia;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Journal of physical chemistry. B, Condensed matter, materials, surfaces, interfaces, & biophysical.

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