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Taming Electrowetting Using Highly Concentrated Aqueous Solutions.


ABSTRACT: Wetting of carbon surfaces is one of the most widespread, yet poorly understood, physical phenomena. Control over wetting properties underpins the operation of aqueous energy-storage devices and carbon-based filtration systems. Electrowetting, the variation in the contact angle with an applied potential, is the most straightforward way of introducing control over wetting. Here, we study electrowetting directly on graphitic surfaces with the use of aqueous electrolytes to show that reversible control of wetting can be achieved and quantitatively understood using models of the interfacial capacitance. We manifest that the use of highly concentrated aqueous electrolytes induces a fully symmetric and reversible wetting behavior without degradation of the substrate within the unprecedented potential window of 2.8 V. We demonstrate where the classical "Young-Lippmann" models apply, and break down, and discuss reasons for the latter, establishing relations among the applied bias, the electrolyte concentration, and the resultant contact angle. The approach is extended to electrowetting at the liquid|liquid interface, where a concentrated aqueous electrolyte drives reversibly the electrowetting response of an insulating organic phase with a significantly decreased potential threshold. In summary, this study highlights the beneficial effect of highly concentrated aqueous electrolytes on the electrowettability of carbon surfaces, being directly related to the performance of carbon-based aqueous energy-storage systems and electronic and microfluidic devices.

SUBMITTER: Papaderakis AA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9761672 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Taming Electrowetting Using Highly Concentrated Aqueous Solutions.

Papaderakis Athanasios A AA   Polus Kacper K   Kant Pallav P   Box Finn F   Etcheverry Bruno B   Byrne Conor C   Quinn Martin M   Walton Alex A   Juel Anne A   Dryfe Robert A W RAW  

The journal of physical chemistry. C, Nanomaterials and interfaces 20221130 49


Wetting of carbon surfaces is one of the most widespread, yet poorly understood, physical phenomena. Control over wetting properties underpins the operation of aqueous energy-storage devices and carbon-based filtration systems. Electrowetting, the variation in the contact angle with an applied potential, is the most straightforward way of introducing control over wetting. Here, we study electrowetting directly on graphitic surfaces with the use of aqueous electrolytes to show that reversible con  ...[more]

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