Litcius/Paper detail

Tuning the Charge of Sliding Water Drops

William S. Y. Wong, Pravash Bista, Xiaomei Li, Lothar Veith, Azadeh Sharifi-Aghili, Stefan A. L. Weber, Hans‐Jürgen Butt

2022Langmuir38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

When a water drop slides over a hydrophobic surface, it usually acquires a positive charge and deposits the negative countercharge on the surface. Although the electrification of solid surfaces induced after contact with a liquid is intensively studied, the actual mechanisms of charge separation, so-termed slide electrification, are still unclear. Here, slide electrification is studied by measuring the charge of a series of water drops sliding down inclined glass plates. The glass was coated with hydrophobic (hydrocarbon/fluorocarbon) and amine-terminated silanes. On hydrophobic surfaces, drops charge positively while the surfaces charge negatively. Hydrophobic surfaces coated with a mono-amine (3-aminopropyltriethyoxysilane) lead to negatively charged drops and positively charged surfaces. When coated with a multiamine (N-(3-trimethoxysilylpropyl)diethylenetriamine), a gradual transition from positively to negatively charged drops is observed. We attribute this tunable drop charging to surface-directed ion transfer. Some of the protons accepted by the amine-functionalized surfaces (−NH2 with H+ acceptor) remain on the surface even after drop departure. These findings demonstrate the facile tunability of surface-controlled slide electrification.

Topics & Concepts

Drop (telecommunication)Contact electrificationSurface chargeChemical physicsAmine gas treatingChemical engineeringContact angleChemistryMaterials scienceFluorocarbonOrganic chemistryComposite materialPhysical chemistryTriboelectric effectComputer scienceEngineeringTelecommunicationsSurface Modification and SuperhydrophobicityElectrowetting and Microfluidic TechnologiesAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials