An evaluation of complementary approaches to elucidate fundamental interfacial phenomena driving adhesion of energetic materials.

J Colloid Interface Sci

School of Chemical Engineering, Purdue University, 480 Stadium Mall Drive, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2100, USA. Electronic address:

Published: July 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study measures cohesive Hamaker constants of various energetic materials using multiple techniques, including contact angle measurements, which had previously been difficult due to sample compatibility issues.
  • The researchers used physical vapor deposition to create thin films of five energetic materials and successfully applied contact angle measurements, finding Hamaker constants between 85zJ and 135zJ.
  • Comparisons showed that contact angle measurements yielded higher values for Hamaker constants than those derived from Lifshitz theory and inverse gas chromatography (IGC), providing a valuable database for understanding the adhesion properties of these materials.

Article Abstract

Cohesive Hamaker constants of solid materials are measured via optical and dielectric properties (i.e., Lifshitz theory), inverse gas chromatography (IGC), and contact angle measurements. To date, however, a comparison across these measurement techniques for common energetic materials has not been reported. This has been due to the inability of the community to produce samples of energetic materials that are readily compatible with contact angle measurements. Here we overcome this limitation by using physical vapor deposition to produce thin films of five common energetic materials, and the contact angle measurement approach is applied to estimate the cohesive Hamaker constants and surface energy components of the materials. The cohesive Hamaker constants range from 85zJ to 135zJ across the different films. When these Hamaker constants are compared to prior work using Lifshitz theory and nonpolar probe IGC, the relative magnitudes can be ordered as follows: contact angle>Lifshitz>IGC. Furthermore, the dispersive surface energy components estimated here are in good agreement with those estimated by IGC. Due to these results, researchers and technologists will now have access to a comprehensive database of adhesion constants which describe the behavior of these energetic materials over a range of settings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2016.03.024DOI Listing

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