Abstract

Hydration of interfaces with a layer of water is a ubiquitous phenomenon, which has important implications for numerous natural and technologically important processes. Nevertheless, at the nanoscale, the understanding of the wetting process is still limited, since it is experimentally difficult to follow. Here, graphene and monolayers of MoS2 deposited on dry mica are used to investigate wetting of the two-dimensional (2D) material-mica interfaces with a molecularly thin layer of water employing scanning force microscopy in different modes. Wetting occurs non-monotonously in time and space for both types of interfaces. It starts at relative humidities (RH) of 10-17% for graphenes and 8-9% for MoS2 and concludes with a homogeneous layer at 25-30 and 15-20%, respectively. Investigation of the process at the graphene-mica interface indicates that up to about 25% RH, initially a highly compliant and unstable layer of water spreads, which subsequently stabilizes by developing labyrinthine nanostructures. Moreover, these nanostructures exhibit distinct mechanical deformability and dissipation, which is ascribed to different densities of the confined water layer. The laterally structured morphology is explained by the interplay of counteracting long-range dipole-dipole repulsion and short-range line tension, with the latter causing at least in part by the mechanical deformation of the 2D material. The proposed origins of the interactions are common for thin layers of polar molecules at interfaces, implying that the lateral structuring of thin wetting layers at submonolayer concentrations may also be a quite general phenomenon.

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