Wetting behavior of a colloidal particle trapped at a composite liquid-vapor interface of a binary liquid mixture
Hyojeong Kim, Lothar Schimmele, and S. Dietrich

TL;DR
This theoretical study investigates the wetting behavior of a colloidal particle at a composite liquid-vapor interface in a binary mixture, revealing multiple wetting scenarios influenced by interaction deviations from mixing rules.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analytical framework for understanding wetting phenomena at complex interfaces, considering deviations from classical mixing rules in a binary liquid mixture.
Findings
Up to six wetting scenarios identified based on interaction parameters.
The phase space for wetting behaviors depends on deviations from mixing rules.
Range of contact angles varies across different wetting regimes.
Abstract
A partially miscible binary liquid mixture, composed of A and B particles, is considered theoretically under conditions for which a stable A-rich liquid phase is in thermal equilibrium with the vapor phase. The B-rich liquid is metastable. The liquids and the thermodynamic conditions are chosen such, that the interface between the A-rich liquid and the vapor contains an intervening wetting film of the B-rich phase. In order to obtain information about the large-scale fluid structure around a colloidal particle, which is trapped at such a composite liquid-vapor interface, three related and linked wetting phenomena at planar liquid-vapor, wall-liquid, and wall-vapor interfaces are studied analytically, using classical density functional theory in conjunction with the sharp-kink approximation for the number density profiles of the A and B particles. If in accordance with the so-called…
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