2 research outputs found
Different Shades of Oxide: From Nanoscale Wetting Mechanisms to Contact Printing of Gallium-Based Liquid Metals
Gallium-based liquid metals are of
interest for a variety of applications
including flexible electronics, soft robotics, and biomedical devices.
Still, nano- to microscale device fabrication with these materials
is challenging because, despite having surface tension 10 times higher
than water, they strongly adhere to a majority of substrates. This
unusually high adhesion is attributed to the formation of a thin oxide
shell; however, its role in the adhesion process has not yet been
established. In this work, we demonstrate that, dependent on dynamics
of formation and resulting morphology of the liquid metal–substrate
interface, GaInSn adhesion can occur in two modes. The first mode
occurs when the oxide shell is not ruptured as it makes contact with
the substrate. Because of the nanoscale topology of the oxide surface,
this mode results in minimal adhesion between the liquid metal and
most solids, regardless of substrate’s surface energy or texture.
In the second mode, the formation of the GaInSn–substrate interface
involves rupturing of the original oxide skin and formation of a composite
interface that includes contact between the substrate and pieces of
old oxide, bare liquid metal, and new oxide. We demonstrate that in
this latter mode GaInSn adhesion is dominated by the intimate contact
between new oxide and substrate. We also show that by varying the
pinned contact line length using varied degrees of surface texturing,
the adhesion of GaInSn in this mode can be either decreased or increased.
Lastly, we demonstrate how these two adhesion modes limit microcontact
printing of GaInSn patterns but can be exploited to repeatedly print
individual sub-200 nm liquid metal drops
Different Shades of Oxide: From Nanoscale Wetting Mechanisms to Contact Printing of Gallium-Based Liquid Metals
Gallium-based liquid metals are of
interest for a variety of applications
including flexible electronics, soft robotics, and biomedical devices.
Still, nano- to microscale device fabrication with these materials
is challenging because, despite having surface tension 10 times higher
than water, they strongly adhere to a majority of substrates. This
unusually high adhesion is attributed to the formation of a thin oxide
shell; however, its role in the adhesion process has not yet been
established. In this work, we demonstrate that, dependent on dynamics
of formation and resulting morphology of the liquid metal–substrate
interface, GaInSn adhesion can occur in two modes. The first mode
occurs when the oxide shell is not ruptured as it makes contact with
the substrate. Because of the nanoscale topology of the oxide surface,
this mode results in minimal adhesion between the liquid metal and
most solids, regardless of substrate’s surface energy or texture.
In the second mode, the formation of the GaInSn–substrate interface
involves rupturing of the original oxide skin and formation of a composite
interface that includes contact between the substrate and pieces of
old oxide, bare liquid metal, and new oxide. We demonstrate that in
this latter mode GaInSn adhesion is dominated by the intimate contact
between new oxide and substrate. We also show that by varying the
pinned contact line length using varied degrees of surface texturing,
the adhesion of GaInSn in this mode can be either decreased or increased.
Lastly, we demonstrate how these two adhesion modes limit microcontact
printing of GaInSn patterns but can be exploited to repeatedly print
individual sub-200 nm liquid metal drops