Issue 10, 2016

Surface energy and wettability of van der Waals structures

Abstract

The wetting behaviour of surfaces is believed to be affected by van der Waals (vdW) forces; however, there is no clear demonstration of this. With the isolation of two-dimensional vdW layered materials it is possible to test this hypothesis. In this paper, we report the wetting behaviour of vdW heterostructures which include chemical vapor deposition (CVD) grown graphene, molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) and tungsten disulfide (WS2) on few layers of hexagon boron nitride (h-BN) and SiO2/Si. Our study clearly shows that while this class of two-dimensional materials are not completely wetting transparent, there seems to be a significant amount of influence on their wetting properties by the underlying substrate due to dominant vdW forces. Contact angle measurements indicate that graphene and graphene-like layered transitional metal dichalcogenides invariably have intrinsically dispersive surfaces with a dominating London–vdW force-mediated wettability.

Graphical abstract: Surface energy and wettability of van der Waals structures

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Sep 2015
Accepted
11 Feb 2016
First published
11 Feb 2016

Nanoscale, 2016,8, 5764-5770

Author version available

Surface energy and wettability of van der Waals structures

M. Annamalai, K. Gopinadhan, S. A. Han, S. Saha, H. J. Park, E. B. Cho, B. Kumar, A. Patra, S. Kim and T. Venkatesan, Nanoscale, 2016, 8, 5764 DOI: 10.1039/C5NR06705G

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