화학공학소재연구정보센터
Langmuir, Vol.35, No.7, 2747-2759, 2019
"Big Dipper" Dynamic Contact Angle Curves for Pt-Cured Poly(dimethylsiloxane) on a Thermal Gradient: Inter-relationships of Hydrosilylation, Si-H Autoxidation, and Si-OH Condensation to a Secondary Network
Platinum cure for poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) coatings on a thermal gradient (45-140 degrees C) was carried out to study the effect of temperature on surface chemistry and wetting behavior. The motivation is the interest in surfaces with continuous gradients in wettability for applications such as protein adsorption, controlling bacterial adhesion, directional movement of cells, and biosensors. The Wilhelmy plate method and the advancing/receding drop method were employed for determining the positional dependence of theta(A) and theta(R). A strong dependence of receding contact angles (theta(R)) on cure temperature was found for Sylgard 184 (S-PDMS) and a Pt-cured laboratory-prepared analogue (Pt-PDMS) of known composition. Cure on the thermal gradient gave rise to striking "Big Dipper" Wilhelmy plate dynamic contact angle curves. High contact angle hysteresis (60-80 degrees) was found for 45 degrees C cure (CAH = theta(Delta) = theta(A) - theta(R)) but low CAH for 140 degrees C cure (10-20 degrees). Drop addition/withdrawal using goniometry identified a similar trend. Attenuated total reflectance infrared spectroscopy showed absorptions for Si-OH (3500 cm(-1)) and Si-H (1250 cm(-1)) that were correlated with wetting behavior and near-surface chemistry. These studies revealed a complex relationship among hydrosilylation, Si-H autoxidation, and condensation of Si-OH. A model for advancing from a single network due to hydrosilylation to a double network for hydrosilylation plus Si-O-Si from condensation of Si-OH best explains evidence from spectroscopic and contact angle studies. These results are relevant to interactions of Pt-cured silicones at bio-interfaces, as receding contact angles determine work of adhesion, as well as applications that benefit from maximum hydrophobicity and minimizing water roll-off angles.