We study experimentally the molecular weight M dependence of spreading
rates of molecularly thin precursor films, growing at the bottom of droplets of
polymer liquids. In accord with previous observations, we find that the radial
extension R(t) of the film grows with time as R(t) = (D_{exp} t)^{1/2}. Our
data substantiate the M-dependence of D_{exp}; we show that it follows D_{exp}
\sim M^{-\gamma}, where the exponent \gamma is dependent on the chemical
composition of the solid surface, determining its frictional properties with
respect to the molecular transport. In the specific case of hydrophilic
substrates, the frictional properties can be modified by the change of the
relative humidity (RH). We find that \gamma \approx 1 at low RH and tends to
zero when RH gets progressively increased. We propose simple theoretical
arguments which explain the observed behavior in the limits of low and high RH.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in PR