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Measuring Work of Adhesion of Polystyrene Microspheres
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Abstract
Particle adhesion is relevant in fields ranging from aerospace and energy to civil engineering and medicine. The functions of aerodynamic surfaces, heat exchangers, solar panels, ventilation systems, and blood vessels are affected by the buildup of particulates on their surfaces. Direct measurement of the adhesive force between a particle and a surface is key to understanding and mitigating particle fouling. Approaches such as the Johnson-Kendall-Roberts (JKR) and Derjaguin-Muller-Toporov (DMT) models offer a first approximation of the forces involved but do not account for non-idealities like roughness or plastic deformation. Experimental measurements of adhesive forces often deviate significantly from predictions. One approach to measure adhesion is the colloidal probe technique, which uses a particle attached to the tip of an atomic force microscope (AFM) cantilever. The particle is touched to a surface and then withdrawn and a pull-off force (FPO) determined by cantilever deflection. FPO can be used to estimate work of adhesion (Wa) and other properties from existing models. We describe a new method for producing colloidal probes using wax as an adhesive to attach micrometer-scale spheres to AFM tips. This method can be used with a range of particles and minimizes the potential for changes to the particle surface chemistry or geometry from exposure to heat, chemicals, radiation, or external forces. Particle attachment to AFM tips is robust and reversible, allowing old particles to be replaced with new ones in a few minutes. Pull-off measurements using polystyrene (PS) particles, pristine and modified with myristyltrimethylammonium bromide (14-TAB), were collected from various substrates to demonstrate the viability of this technique and investigate the impact of particle surface modification