Long-Range Attraction between Graphene and Water/Oil Interfaces
Avishi Abeywickrama, Douglas H. Adamson, Hannes C. Schniepp

TL;DR
This study measures long-range hydrophobic attractions between graphene-coated probes and oil droplets in water, revealing forces up to 1.2 microns influenced by surface hydrophobicity, expanding understanding of solid/water/oil interactions.
Contribution
It demonstrates long-range hydrophobic forces involving graphene and water/oil interfaces, extending previous knowledge to include solid/water/liquid systems with potential applications in colloid science.
Findings
Forces up to 1.2 microns observed
Hydrophobicity increases force strength and range
Proposed mechanisms involve air bubbles and molecular rearrangement
Abstract
We directly measured the interactions between a hydrophobic solid and a hydrophobic liquid separated by water using force spectroscopy, where colloidal probes were coated with graphene oxide (GO) to interact with immobilized heptane droplets in water. We detected attractions with a long range of ~0.5 microns, which cannot be readily explained by standard Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory. When the GO was reduced to become more hydrophobic, these forces increased in strength and ranged up to 1.2 microns, suggesting that the hydrophobic nature of the involved surfaces critically influences the observed long-range forces. Previous studies have addressed such hydrophobic attractions, but were limited to solid/water/solid and solid/water/air scenarios. Here we expand this knowledge to include the solid/water/liquid situation. Based on our results, we propose air bubbles attached…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Electrostatics and Colloid Interactions · Nanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies
