Quantifying the solid-fluid interfacial tensions depending on the substrate curvature: Young's equation holds for wetting around nanoscale cylinder

K Watanabe and H Kusudo and C Bistafa and T Omori and Y Yamaguchi, JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 156, 054701 (2022).

DOI: 10.1063/5.0079816

By extending the theoretical framework derived in our previous study Imaizumi et al., J. Chem. Phys. 153, 034701 (2020), we successfully calculated the solid-liquid (SL) and solid-vapor (SV) interfacial tensions of a simple Lennard-Jones fluid around solid cylinders with nanometer-scale diameters from single equilibrium molecular dynamics systems in which a solid cylinder was vertically immersed into a liquid pool. The SL and SV interfacial tensions gamma(SL) - gamma(S0) and gamma(SV) - gamma(S0) relative to that for bare solid surface gamma(S0), respectively, were obtained by simple force balance relations on fluid- containing control volumes set around the bottom and top ends of the solid cylinder, which are subject to the fluid stress and the force from the solid. The theoretical contact angle calculated by Young's equation using these interfacial tensions agreed well with the apparent contact angle estimated by the analytical solution to fit the meniscus shape, showing that Young's equation holds even for the menisci around solids with nanoscale curvature. We have also found that the curvature effect on the contact angle was surprisingly small while it was indeed large on the local forces exerted on the solid cylinder near the contact line. In addition, the present results showed that the curvature dependence of the SL and SV interfacial free energies, which are the interfacial tensions, is different from that of the corresponding interfacial potential energies.& nbsp;(c) 2022 Author(s). All article content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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