AI Article Synopsis

  • Cellulosic materials are commonly used for products like paper and clothing, and can benefit from improved hydrophobic properties through modification techniques.
  • A new method using atomic layer deposition (ALD) followed by heating alters the wettability of cellulosic paper, making it superhydrophobic.
  • The research demonstrates that this modified paper can also display selective wettability patterns, useful for a variety of applications.

Article Abstract

Cellulosic materials are widely used in daily life for paper products and clothing as well as for emerging applications in sustainable packaging and inexpensive medical diagnostics. Cellulose has a high density of hydroxyl groups that create strong intra- and interfiber hydrogen bonding. These abundant hydroxyl groups also make cellulose superhydrophilic. Schemes for hydrophobization and spatially selective hydrophobization of cellulosic materials can expand the application space for cellulose. Cellulose is often hydrophobized through wet chemistry surface modification methods. This work reports a new modification method using a combination of atomic layer deposition (ALD) and atmospheric heating to alter the wettability of purely cellulosic chromatography paper. We find that once the cellulosic paper is coated with a single ALD cycle (1cy-ALD) of AlO, it can be made sticky superhydrophobic after a 150 °C ambient post-ALD heating step. An X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy investigation reveals that the ALD-modified cellulosic surface becomes more susceptible to adsorption of adventitious carbon upon heating than an untreated cellulosic surface. This conclusion is further supported by the ability to use alternating air plasma and heat treatments to reversibly transition between the hydrophilic and hydrophobic states. We attribute the apparent abruptness of this wetting transition to a Cassie-Wenzel-like phenomenon, which is also consistent with the sticky hydrophobic wetting behavior. Using scanning probe methods, we show that the surfaces have roughness at multiple length scales. Using a Cassie-Wenzel model, we show how a small change in the surface's Young's contact angle-upon adsorption of adventitious carbon-can lead to an abrupt increase in hydrophobicity for surfaces with such roughnesses. Finally, we demonstrate the ability to spatially pattern the wettability on these 1cy-ALD-treated cellulosic papers via selective heating. This ALD-treated hydrophobic paper also shows promise for microliter droplet manipulation and patterned lab-on-paper devices.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c22672DOI Listing

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