4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

The local compressibility of liquids near non-adsorbing substrates: a useful measure of solvophobicity and hydrophobicity?

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER
Volume 27, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0953-8984/27/19/194111

Keywords

compressibility; density fluctuations; hydrophobic surfaces; density functional theory; confined liquids; gas-liquid interfaces; wetting and drying

Funding

  1. Leverhulme Trust [EM/2011-080]

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We investigate the suitability of the local compressibility chi(z)as a measure of the solvophobicity or hydrophobicity of a substrate. Defining the local compressibility as the derivative of the local one-body density rho(z) w.r.t. the chemical potential mu at fixed temperature T, we use density functional theory (DFT) to calculate chi(z) for a model fluid, close to bulk liquid-gas coexistence, at various planar substrates. These range from a 'neutral' substrate with a contact angle of theta approximate to 90 degrees, which favours neither the liquid nor the gas phase, to a very solvophobic, purely repulsive substrate which exhibits complete drying, i.e. theta = 180 degrees. We find that the maximum in the local compressibility chi(z), which occurs within one-two molecular diameters of the substrate, and the integrated quantity chi(ex) (the surface excess compressibility, defined below) both increase rapidly as theta increases and the substrate becomes more solvophobic. chi(z) provides a more pronounced indicator of solvophobicity than the density depletion in the vicinity of the surface which increases only weakly with increasing theta. For the limiting case of drying, theta = 180 degrees, we find ln chi(l) similar to l, where l is the thickness of the intruding film of gas which diverges in the approach to bulk coexistence mu -> mu(co). When the fluid is confined in a parallel slit with two identical solvophobic walls, or with competing solvophobic and solvophilic walls, chi(z) close to the solvophobic wall is altered little from that at the single substrate. We connect our results with simulation studies of water near to hydrophobic surfaces exploring the relationship between chi(z) and fluctuations in the local density and between chi(ex) and the mean-square fluctuation in the number of adsorbed molecules.

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