Abstract

Time-dependent contact angle measurements are employed to follow the dynamics of surface modifications of various polymeric surfaces of different hydrophilicities. The equilibration of a hydrophilic polymer in a strong polar environment (such as water) induces an increase in the polarity of the surface; the subsequent exposure of the restructured solid to a nonpolar environment decreases the polarity of the surface. The dynamics of these processes depends on the history of the specimen. Various phenomena, such as surface restructuring by the reorientation of the buried polar or nonpolar moieties, water penetration into the polymer, and the reorganization of water in the neighborhood of the surface, are suggested to be responsible for the time evolution of the dynamic contact angles.

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