Adhesion of fluid infused silicone elastomer to glass
Anushka Jha, Preetika Karnal, Joelle Frechette

TL;DR
This study investigates how oil content and contact duration affect adhesion between silicone elastomer probes and glass, revealing that oil reduces adhesion and contact time can increase it through different mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the effects of oil fraction and contact time on adhesion in swollen PDMS, supported by experimental measurements and modeling.
Findings
Adhesion decreases rapidly with increasing oil fraction.
Adhesion increases with contact time due to different mechanisms.
Fully swollen PDMS adhesion is mainly capillary-driven.
Abstract
Elastomers swollen with non-polar fluids show potential as anti-adhesive materials. We study the effect of oil fraction and contact time on the adhesion between swollen spherical probes of PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane) and flat glass surfaces. The PDMS probes are swollen with pre-determined amount of 10 cSt silicone oil to span the range where the PDMS is fluid free (via solvent extraction) up to the limit where it is oil saturated. Probe tack measurements show that adhesion decreases rapidly with an increase in oil fraction. The decrease in adhesion is attributed to excess oil present at the PDMS-air interface. Contact angle measurements and optical microscopy images support this observation. Adhesion also increases with contact time for a given oil fraction. The increase in adhesion with contact time can be interpreted through different competing mechanisms that depend on the oil…
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