Abstract

In the conventional methods of estimating the wetting characteristics of solids from contact angle experiments, the surface energetic properties of the solid are assumed to be identical in the environments of both the surrounding medium and probe fluids. While this assumption is suitable for solids which possess rigid surface structures (such as glasses, ceramics, and metals for example), it is generally inapplicable to polymeric solids, since the surfaces of the latter are relatively mobile so as to be able to adopt considerably different configurations in different environments. Based on a recognition of this feature of polymeric surfaces, a sequence of contact angle experiments is suggested to estimate: (a) the instantaneous as well as equilibrium surface energetic properties of a polymeric solid in an aqueous environment and (b) the time required for the polymeric surface to attain its equilibrium wetting characteristics in the aqueous environment. In order to illustrate the applicability of the suggested contact angle procedure, it is necessary to prepare model polymeric surfaces, which are smooth in surface texture, nonporous, and also chemically homogeneous. Such model surfaces were prepared in this study, by radio frequency sputter deposition of thin solid films of oxidized fluorocarbon compounds (from a Teflon FEP target) onto the smooth surfaces of highly polished, single crystal silicon substrates. The estimation of the wetting characteristics of the sputtered polymer films in an aqueous environment was then carried out by the suggested contact angle procedure. The results of the contact angle experiments indicate that the solid-water interfacial free energy of the sputtered polymer film which was initially equilibrated in an octane environment, decreases from an instantaneous value of 50.88 dyn/cm to an equilibrium value of 26.59 dyn/cm, over a duration of about 24 h. Such a change in the solid-water interfacial free energy of these model polymeric surfaces can arise due to a time-dependent reorientation of the buried polar groups of the solid from its bulk to its surface, when it is placed in contact with a strongly polar liquid like water. This interpretation was found to be consistent with the results of ESCA characterization, which indicated that the outer surface layers of the sputtered polymeric specimen contained a fair amount of the polar oxygen atoms that are capable of reorienting themselves from either the interior of the solid to its surface or vice versa, depending on their surrounding environment.

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