Water molecule clusters measured at water/air interfaces using atomic force microscopy
Abstract
During the tip approach to hydrophobic surfaces like the water/air interface, the measured interaction force reveals a strong attraction with a range of ∼250 nm at some points along the interface. The range of this force is ∼100 times larger than the measured for gold (∼3 nm) and 10 times larger than the one for hydrophobic silicon surfaces (∼25 nm). At other points the interface exerts a medium range repulsive force growing stepwise as the tip approaches the interface plane, consequently the hydrophobic force is a strong function of position. To explain these results we propose a model where the force on the tip is associated with the exchange of a small volume of the interface with a dielectric permittivity εint by the tip with a dielectric permittivity εtip. By assuming a oscillatory spatial dependence for the dielectric permittivity it is possible to fit the measured force profiles. This dielectric spatial variation was associated with the orientation of the