Abstract

ABSTRACTIn the present study, molecular dynamics (MD) simulation was used to investigate the relationship between wetting behaviour and slip length on patterned substrates. We adopted two solid surfaces of Si(100) and graphite due to similarities in their intrinsic contact angle. Contact angle and apparent slip length were obtained using discrete simulations with the same thermodynamic states. In the present study, a number of questions regarding surface roughness and the problem of contact angle (θ) and slip length (Ls) are discussed. These questions include the relationship between θ and surface roughness, the characteristics used to describe the difference between static and dynamic fluid fields and the reason for a lack of multilayer sticking observed in the current cases. Our results indicate that the quasi-universal θ − Ls equation proposed by Hung et al. (2008) is applicable to cases involving a Cassie-like nanoscale roughened surface. In contrast, in cases with a Wenzel-like nanostructure, the no-slip boundary conditions are independent of variations in the contact angle. The adoption of a Wenzel–Cassie hybrid model helped to verify that the fluid density inside the cavity is a critical indicator of wettability of the wall–fluid interface. Our results also demonstrate that ρf, cav is a critical property in the measurement of hydrodynamic effects and thus its importance as an indicator of the validity of the equation θ − Ls. The average time that water molecules are trapped and the number of averaged hydrogen bonds within cavities in a dynamic fluid field were also investigated.

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