Journal article
Measurement of the hydrophobic force in a soft matter system
RF Tabor, C Wu, F Grieser, RR Dagastine, DYC Chan
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | Published : 2013
DOI: 10.1021/jz402068k
Abstract
The hydrophobic attraction describes the well-known tendency for nonpolar molecules and surfaces to agglomerate in water, controlled by the reorganization of intervening water molecules to minimize disruption to their hydrogen bonding network. Measurements of the attraction between chemically hydrophobised solid surfaces have reported ranges varying from tens to hundreds of nanometers, all attributed to hydrophobic forces. Here, by studying the interaction between two hydrophobic oil drops in water under well-controlled conditions where all known surface forces are suppressed, we observe only a strong, short-ranged attraction with an exponential decay length of 0.30 ± 0.03 nm - comparable to..
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Funding Acknowledgements
This research is supported in part by the Australian Research Council through a Discovery Project Grant. C.W. is supported by an Australian Postgraduate Research Award.