The capillary adhesion technique: a versatile method for determining the liquid adhesion force and sample stiffness

We report a novel, practical technique for the concerted, simultaneous determination of both the adhesion force of a small structure or structural unit (e.g., an individual filament, hair, micromechanical component or microsensor) to a liquid and its elastic properties. The method involves the creat...

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Main Authors: Daniel Gandyra, Stefan Walheim, Stanislav Gorb, Wilhelm Barthlott, Thomas Schimmel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Beilstein-Institut 2015-01-01
Series:Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.6.2
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spelling doaj-9bb79bce8684459f820f556e8c6f38952020-11-25T00:03:48ZengBeilstein-InstitutBeilstein Journal of Nanotechnology2190-42862015-01-0161111810.3762/bjnano.6.22190-4286-6-2The capillary adhesion technique: a versatile method for determining the liquid adhesion force and sample stiffnessDaniel Gandyra0Stefan Walheim1Stanislav Gorb2Wilhelm Barthlott3Thomas Schimmel4Institute of Applied Physics and Center for Functional Nanostructures (CFN), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), 76128 Karlsruhe, GermanyInstitute of Applied Physics and Center for Functional Nanostructures (CFN), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), 76128 Karlsruhe, GermanyZoological Institute, University of Kiel, 24118 Kiel, GermanyNees Institute for Biodiversity of Plants, University of Bonn, 53115 Bonn, Germany,Institute of Applied Physics and Center for Functional Nanostructures (CFN), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), 76128 Karlsruhe, GermanyWe report a novel, practical technique for the concerted, simultaneous determination of both the adhesion force of a small structure or structural unit (e.g., an individual filament, hair, micromechanical component or microsensor) to a liquid and its elastic properties. The method involves the creation and development of a liquid meniscus upon touching a liquid surface with the structure, and the subsequent disruption of this liquid meniscus upon removal. The evaluation of the meniscus shape immediately before snap-off of the meniscus allows the quantitative determination of the liquid adhesion force. Concurrently, by measuring and evaluating the deformation of the structure under investigation, its elastic properties can be determined. The sensitivity of the method is remarkably high, practically limited by the resolution of the camera capturing the process. Adhesion forces down to 10 µN and spring constants up to 2 N/m were measured. Three exemplary applications of this method are demonstrated: (1) determination of the water adhesion force and the elasticity of individual hairs (trichomes) of the floating fern Salvinia molesta. (2) The investigation of human head hairs both with and without functional surface coatings (a topic of high relevance in the field of hair cosmetics) was performed. The method also resulted in the measurement of an elastic modulus (Young’s modulus) for individual hairs of 3.0 × 105 N/cm2, which is within the typical range known for human hair. (3) Finally, the accuracy and validity of the capillary adhesion technique was proven by examining calibrated atomic force microscopy cantilevers, reproducing the spring constants calibrated using other methods.https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.6.2adhesionAFM cantileverair layercapillary forceshairsmeasurementmicromechanical systemsmicrostructuresSalvinia effectSalvinia molestasensorsstiffnesssuperhydrophobic surfaces
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Gandyra
Stefan Walheim
Stanislav Gorb
Wilhelm Barthlott
Thomas Schimmel
spellingShingle Daniel Gandyra
Stefan Walheim
Stanislav Gorb
Wilhelm Barthlott
Thomas Schimmel
The capillary adhesion technique: a versatile method for determining the liquid adhesion force and sample stiffness
Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology
adhesion
AFM cantilever
air layer
capillary forces
hairs
measurement
micromechanical systems
microstructures
Salvinia effect
Salvinia molesta
sensors
stiffness
superhydrophobic surfaces
author_facet Daniel Gandyra
Stefan Walheim
Stanislav Gorb
Wilhelm Barthlott
Thomas Schimmel
author_sort Daniel Gandyra
title The capillary adhesion technique: a versatile method for determining the liquid adhesion force and sample stiffness
title_short The capillary adhesion technique: a versatile method for determining the liquid adhesion force and sample stiffness
title_full The capillary adhesion technique: a versatile method for determining the liquid adhesion force and sample stiffness
title_fullStr The capillary adhesion technique: a versatile method for determining the liquid adhesion force and sample stiffness
title_full_unstemmed The capillary adhesion technique: a versatile method for determining the liquid adhesion force and sample stiffness
title_sort capillary adhesion technique: a versatile method for determining the liquid adhesion force and sample stiffness
publisher Beilstein-Institut
series Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology
issn 2190-4286
publishDate 2015-01-01
description We report a novel, practical technique for the concerted, simultaneous determination of both the adhesion force of a small structure or structural unit (e.g., an individual filament, hair, micromechanical component or microsensor) to a liquid and its elastic properties. The method involves the creation and development of a liquid meniscus upon touching a liquid surface with the structure, and the subsequent disruption of this liquid meniscus upon removal. The evaluation of the meniscus shape immediately before snap-off of the meniscus allows the quantitative determination of the liquid adhesion force. Concurrently, by measuring and evaluating the deformation of the structure under investigation, its elastic properties can be determined. The sensitivity of the method is remarkably high, practically limited by the resolution of the camera capturing the process. Adhesion forces down to 10 µN and spring constants up to 2 N/m were measured. Three exemplary applications of this method are demonstrated: (1) determination of the water adhesion force and the elasticity of individual hairs (trichomes) of the floating fern Salvinia molesta. (2) The investigation of human head hairs both with and without functional surface coatings (a topic of high relevance in the field of hair cosmetics) was performed. The method also resulted in the measurement of an elastic modulus (Young’s modulus) for individual hairs of 3.0 × 105 N/cm2, which is within the typical range known for human hair. (3) Finally, the accuracy and validity of the capillary adhesion technique was proven by examining calibrated atomic force microscopy cantilevers, reproducing the spring constants calibrated using other methods.
topic adhesion
AFM cantilever
air layer
capillary forces
hairs
measurement
micromechanical systems
microstructures
Salvinia effect
Salvinia molesta
sensors
stiffness
superhydrophobic surfaces
url https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.6.2
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