A metric for wettability at the nanoscale
Ronaldo Giro, Peter W. Bryant, Michael Engel, Rodrigo F. Neumann and, Mathias Steiner

TL;DR
This paper investigates how wettability at the nanoscale deviates from classical models, introducing a new metric based on adsorption energy density to better quantify liquid-solid affinity at very small scales.
Contribution
It combines nanoscale experiments with molecular simulations to analyze droplet shape breakdown and proposes a novel metric for nanoscale wettability based on adsorption energy density.
Findings
Droplet shapes become increasingly non-spherical as volume decreases.
Nanoscale droplets flatten into molecular layers instead of spherical caps.
Adsorption energy density effectively characterizes wettability at the nanoscale.
Abstract
Wettability is the affinity of a liquid for a solid surface. For energetic reasons, macroscopic drops of liquid are nearly spherical away from interfaces with solids, and any local deformations due to molecular-scale surface interactions are negligible. Studies of wetting phenomena, therefore, typically assume that a liquid on a surface adopts the shape of a spherical cap. The degree of wettability is then captured by the contact angle where the liquid-vapor interface meets the solid-liquid interface. As droplet volumes shrink to the scale of attoliters, however, surface interactions become significant, and droplets gradually assume distorted shapes that no longer comply with our conventional, macroscopic conception of a drop. In this regime, the contact angle becomes ambiguous, and it is unclear how to parametrize a liquid's affinity for a surface. A scalable metric for quantifying…
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