TY - JOUR
T1 - Friction Coefficients for Droplets on Solids: The Liquid-Solid Amontons’ Laws
AU - McHale, Glen
AU - Gao, Nan
AU - Wells, Gary
AU - Barrio-Zhang, Hernán
AU - Ledesma Aguilar, Rodrigo
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research: grants ER1-143489352509 and PJT155984390487 to M.C. S.Q. was supported by a graduate scholarship from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. M.C. holds a Canada Research Chair in Molecular Virology and Antiviral Therapeutics and is a recipient of an Ontario Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science Early Researcher Award.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/4/12
Y1 - 2022/4/12
N2 - The empirical laws of dry friction between two solid bodies date back to the work of Amontons in 1699 and are pre-dated by the work of Leonardo da Vinci. Fundamental to those laws are the concepts of static and kinetic coefficients of friction relating the pinning and sliding friction forces along a surface to the normal load force. For liquids on solid surfaces contact lines also experience pinning and the language of friction is used when droplets are in motion. However, it is only recently that the concept of coefficients of friction has been defined in this context and that droplet friction has been discussed as having a static and a kinetic regime. Here we use surface free energy considerations to show the frictional force per unit length of a contact line is directly proportional to the normal component of the surface tension force. We define coefficients of friction for both contact lines and droplets, and provide a droplet analogy of Amontons’ first and second laws, but with the normal load force of a solid replaced by the normal surface tension force of a liquid. In the static regime, the coefficient of static friction, defined by the maximum pinning force of a droplet, is proportional to the contact angle hysteresis, whereas in the kinetic regime the coefficient of kinetic friction is proportional to the difference in dynamic advancing and receding contact angles. We show the consistency between the droplet form of Amontons’ first and second laws and an equation derived by Furmidge. We use these liquid-solid Amontons’ laws to describe literature data, and report friction coefficients for various liquid-solid systems. The conceptual framework reported here should provide insight into the design of superhydrophobic, slippery liquid infused porous surfaces (SLIPS) and other surfaces designed to control droplet motion.
AB - The empirical laws of dry friction between two solid bodies date back to the work of Amontons in 1699 and are pre-dated by the work of Leonardo da Vinci. Fundamental to those laws are the concepts of static and kinetic coefficients of friction relating the pinning and sliding friction forces along a surface to the normal load force. For liquids on solid surfaces contact lines also experience pinning and the language of friction is used when droplets are in motion. However, it is only recently that the concept of coefficients of friction has been defined in this context and that droplet friction has been discussed as having a static and a kinetic regime. Here we use surface free energy considerations to show the frictional force per unit length of a contact line is directly proportional to the normal component of the surface tension force. We define coefficients of friction for both contact lines and droplets, and provide a droplet analogy of Amontons’ first and second laws, but with the normal load force of a solid replaced by the normal surface tension force of a liquid. In the static regime, the coefficient of static friction, defined by the maximum pinning force of a droplet, is proportional to the contact angle hysteresis, whereas in the kinetic regime the coefficient of kinetic friction is proportional to the difference in dynamic advancing and receding contact angles. We show the consistency between the droplet form of Amontons’ first and second laws and an equation derived by Furmidge. We use these liquid-solid Amontons’ laws to describe literature data, and report friction coefficients for various liquid-solid systems. The conceptual framework reported here should provide insight into the design of superhydrophobic, slippery liquid infused porous surfaces (SLIPS) and other surfaces designed to control droplet motion.
KW - Amontons’ laws
KW - Furmidge
KW - coefficients of friction
KW - droplets
KW - SLIPS
KW - Lubricant Impregnated Surface
KW - contact angle
KW - contact angle hysteresis
KW - Young's Law
U2 - 10.1021/acs.langmuir.2c00178
DO - 10.1021/acs.langmuir.2c00178
M3 - Article
C2 - 35353534
VL - 38
SP - 4425
EP - 4433
JO - Langmuir
JF - Langmuir
SN - 0743-7463
IS - 14
ER -