Abstract

Studies have shown that when insulator surfaces become electrostatically charged, complex spatial distributions of charge are produced, which are made up of micrometer-scale regions of both charge polarities. The origin of these charge patterns, often called "charge mosaics", is not understood. Here, we carried out controlled Kelvin force microscopy experiments on microfabricated interdigitated electrode systems to show that the process of wetting a surface by a liquid followed by evaporation of the liquid in an electric field can lead to neighboring micrometer-scale regions of positive and negative charge, which remain stable long after the electric field is removed. We thus suggest that local electric fields, perhaps due to the existing charge on the surface, can act in concert with liquid evaporation to contribute to the creation of charge mosaics.

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