4.6 Article

Comparing Contact Angle Measurements and Surface Tension Assessments of Solid Surfaces

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 26, Issue 19, Pages 15289-15294

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la1020252

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Commission [NMP-CT-2005-011827]

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Four types of contact angles (receding, most stable, advancing, and static) were measured by two independent laboratories for a large number of solid surfaces, spanning a lam range of surface tensions. It is shown that the most stable contact angle, which is theoretically required for calculating the Young contact angle, is a practical, useful tool for wettability characterization of solid surfaces. In addition, it is shown that the experimentally measured most stable contact angle may not always be approximated by an average angle calculated from the advancing and receding contact angles. The static CA is shown in many cases to be very different from the most stable one. The measured contact angles were used for calculating the surface tensions of the solid samples by five methods. Meaningful differences exist among the surface tensions calculated using four previously known methods (Owens-Wendt, Wu, acid base, and equation of state). A recently developed, Gibbsian-based correlation between interfacial tensions and individual surface tensions was used to calculate the surface tensions of the solid surfaces from the most stable contact angle of water. This calculation yielded in most cases higher values than calculated with the other four methods. On the basis of some low surface energy samples, the higher values appear to be justified.

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