Issue 28, 2024

Flexible hydrogels connecting adhesion and wetting

Abstract

Raindrops falling on window-panes spread upon contact, whereas hail can cause dents or scratches on the same glass window upon contact. While the former phenomenon resembles classical wetting, the latter is dictated by contact and adhesion theories. The classical Young–Dupre law applies to the wetting of pure liquids on rigid solids, whereas conventional contact mechanics theories account for rigid-on-soft or soft-on-rigid contacts with small deformations in the elastic limit. However, the crossover between adhesion and wetting is yet to be fully resolved. The key lies in the study of soft-on-soft interactions with material properties intermediate between liquids and solids. In this work, we translate adhesion to wetting by experimentally probing the static signature of hydrogels in contact with soft PDMS of varying elasticity of both the components. Consequently, we probe this transition across six orders of magnitude in terms of the characteristic elasto-adhesive parameter of the system. In doing so, we reveal previously unknown phenomenology and a theoretical model which smoothly bridges adhesion of glass spheres with total wetting of pure liquids on any given substrate.

Graphical abstract: Flexible hydrogels connecting adhesion and wetting

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Jan 2024
Accepted
15 Apr 2024
First published
16 Apr 2024

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 5516-5526

Flexible hydrogels connecting adhesion and wetting

A. Kim, S. Mitra, S. Shyam, B. Zhao and S. K. Mitra, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 5516 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00022F

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