la052167h_si_006.tif (177 kB)
Download fileVolume of a Nanoscale Water Bridge
figure
posted on 2006-01-31, 00:00 authored by Lucel Sirghi, Robert Szoszkiewicz, Elisa RiedoWater bridges formed through capillary condensation at nanoscale contacts first stretch and then break during
contact rupture. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) pull-off experiments performed in air with hydrophilic tips and
samples show that stretched nanoscopic water bridges are in mechanical equilibrium with the external pull-off force
acting at the contact but not in thermodynamic equilibrium with the water vapor in air. The experimental findings
are explained by a theoretical model that considers constant water volume and decrease of water meniscus curvature
during meniscus stretching. The model predicts that the water bridge breakup distance will be roughly equal to the
cubic root of the water bridge volume. A thermodynamic instability was noticed for large water bridges formed at
the contact of a blunt AFM tip (curvature radius of 400 nm) with a flat sample. In this case, experiments showed rise
and stabilization of the volume of the water at the contact in about 1 s. For sharp AFM tips (curvature radius below
50 nm), the experiments indicated that formation of stable water bridges occurs in a much shorter time (below 5 ms).