Abstract

We study the equilibrium properties and the wetting behavior of a simple liquid on a polymer brush, with and without the presence of lubricant by multibody Dissipative Particle Dynamics simulations. The lubricant is modeled as a polymeric liquid consisting of short chains that are chemically identical with the brush polymers. We investigate the behavior of the brush in terms of the grafting density and the amount of lubricant present. Regarding the wetting behavior, we study a sessile droplet on top of the brush. The droplet consists of nonbonded particles that form a dense phase. Our model and choice of parameters result in the formation of a wetting ridge and in the cloaking of the droplet by the lubricant; i.e., the lubricant chains creep up onto the droplet and eventually cover its surface completely. Cloaking is a phenomenon that is observed experimentally and is of integral importance to the dynamics of sliding droplets. We quantify the cloaking in terms of its thickness, which increases with the amount of lubricant present. The analysis reveals a well-defined transition point where the cloaking sets in. We propose a thermodynamic theory to explain this behavior. In addition, we investigate the dependence of the contact angles on the size of the droplet and the possible effect of line tension. We quantify the variation of the contact angle with the curvature of the contact line on a lubricant free brush and find a negative value for the line tension. Finally we investigate the effect of cloaking/lubrication on the contact angles and the wetting ridge. We find that lubrication and cloaking reduce the contact angles by a couple of degrees. The effect on the wetting ridge is a reduction in the extension of the brush chains near the three phase contact line, an effect that was also observed in experiments of droplets on cross-linked gels.

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