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Capillary-driven indentation of a microparticle into a soft, oil-coated substrate

Justin D. Glover, Jonathan T. Pham

2020Soft Matter15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Small scale contact between a soft, liquid-coated layer and a stiff surface is common in many situations, from synovial fluid on articular cartilage to adhesives in humid environments. Moreover, many model studies on soft adhesive contacts are conducted with soft silicone elastomers, which possess uncrosslinked liquid molecules (i.e. silicone oil) when the modulus is low. We investigate how the thickness of a silicone oil layer on a soft substrate relates to the indentation depth of glass microspheres in contact with crosslinked PDMS, which have a modulus of <10 kPa. The particles indent into the underlying substrate more as a function of decreasing oil layer thickness. This is due to the presence of the liquid layer at the surface that causes capillary forces to pull down on the particle. A simple model that balances the capillary force of the oil layer and the minimal particle-substrate adhesion with the elastic and surface tension forces from the substrate is proposed to predict the particle indentation depth.

Topics & Concepts

IndentationMaterials scienceComposite materialCapillary actionLayer (electronics)Silicone oilSubstrate (aquarium)Surface tensionAdhesionAdhesiveSiliconeViscoelasticityModulusParticle (ecology)NanoindentationContact angleContact areaElastic modulusTension (geology)Double layer (biology)MicroparticleSurface layerNanofabrication and Lithography TechniquesSurface Modification and SuperhydrophobicityAdhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions
Capillary-driven indentation of a microparticle into a soft, oil-coated substrate | Litcius