Critical thresholds in molecular transport through nanogrooves

Abstract

Liquid transport through nanometre-scale grooves departs from classical continuum behaviour as confinement approaches only a few molecular diameters. In this regime, the central challenge is to determine where linear, continuum-like response breaks down and molecular occupancy begins to control the effective flow domain. Here we use non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations of simple liquid argon confined in rectangular grooves between copper walls (width 1–4 nm; depth 0.5–2.5 nm) to isolate geometry-driven effects. We show that confinement induces strong layering and exclusion zones that reduce the hydraulically active region, and we introduce an accessible flow depth defined from time-averaged molecular occupancy relative to an ideal continuum filling. This metric reveals a clear breakdown threshold: for wide grooves, continuum-like behaviour holds down to a depth of ∼1.5 nm, below which flow rate and occupancy deviate sharply from macroscopic predictions; in narrower grooves the deviations are stronger and persist across the studied depths. These results provide a compact, physics-based baseline for groove-confined liquid transport and offer practical guidance for designing etched-like features with predictable delivery, relevant to advanced semiconductor fabrication where groove dimensions are now in the single-digit-nanometre range.

Graphical abstract: Critical thresholds in molecular transport through nanogrooves

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Jan 2026
Accepted
27 Apr 2026
First published
05 May 2026

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Advance Article

Critical thresholds in molecular transport through nanogrooves

J. A. Hossain, M. Z. Siddique and B. Kim, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D6CP00337K

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