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Molecular Physics
An International Journal at the Interface Between Chemistry and Physics
Volume 107, 2009 - Issue 23-24
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Research Articles

Microscopic density functional theory of wetting and drying of a solid substrate by an explicit solvent model of ionic solutions

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Pages 2609-2624 | Received 07 Oct 2009, Accepted 03 Nov 2009, Published online: 19 Dec 2009
 

Abstract

Classical density functional theory (DFT) of inhomogeneous fluids is applied to an explicit solvent ‘semi-primitive’ model (SPM) of ionic solutions to investigate the influence of ionic solutes on the wetting behaviour of a solvent in contact with a neutral or charged planar substrate. The SPM is made up of three species of hard sphere particles with different diameters, interacting via an attractive Yukawa potential to model excluded volume and cohesion. The solvent particles are neutral, while the monovalent anions and cations are oppositely charged. The polar nature of the solvent is modelled by a continuum dielectric permittivity linked to the local solvent density. All three species interact with the impenetrable substrate via an attractive external potential. While excluded volume effects are accurately described by a Rosenfeld ‘fundamental measure’ free energy functional, the short range Yukawa attraction and Coulombic interactions are treated within the mean-field approximation. The ionic solutes are found to have a significant impact on the wetting behaviour of the solvent, in particular on the wetting temperature. Strong electric fields, or long-ranged (weakly screened) Coulombic forces are shown to have the propensity to change the wetting transition from second to first order. The cation–anion size asymmetry leads to charge separation on the liquid–vapour interface of the solution, which in turn can induce a drying transition on the liquid side of liquid–vapour coexistence.

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to P. Bryk, R. Evans and R. Roth for helpful discussions. AO acknowledges the financial support of the Cambridge European Trust, Corpus Christi College Cambridge, Schlumberger Cambridge Research and the EPSRC.

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