Asymmetric and Speed-Dependent Capillary Force Hysteresis and Relaxation of a Suddenly Stopped Moving Contact Line
2016
We report on direct atomic-force-microscope measurements of capillary force hysteresis (CFH) and relaxation of a circular moving contact line (CL) formed on a long micron-sized hydrophobic fiber intersecting a water-air interface. The measured CFH and CL relaxation show a strong asymmetric speed dependence in the advancing and receding directions. A unified model based on force-assisted barrier crossing is utilized to find the underlying energy barrier Eb and size λ associated with the defects on the fiber surface. The experiment demonstrates that the pinning (relaxation) and depinning dynamics of the CL can be described by a common microscopic framework, and the advancing and receding CLs are influenced by two different sets of relatively wetting and nonwetting defects on the fiber surface.
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