On the calculation of solid-fluid contact angles from molecular dynamics (Q280570)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6578352
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| English | On the calculation of solid-fluid contact angles from molecular dynamics |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6578352 |
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On the calculation of solid-fluid contact angles from molecular dynamics (English)
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10 May 2016
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Summary: A methodology for the determination of the solid-fluid contact angle, to be employed within molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, is developed and systematically applied. The calculation of the contact angle of a fluid drop on a given surface, averaged over an equilibrated MD trajectory, is divided in three main steps: (i) the determination of the fluid molecules that constitute the interface, (ii) the treatment of the interfacial molecules as a point cloud data set to define a geometric surface, using surface meshing techniques to compute the surface normals from the mesh, (iii) the collection and averaging of the interface normals collected from the post-processing of the MD trajectory. The average vector thus found is used to calculate the Cassie contact angle (i.e., the arccosine of the averaged normal \(z\)-component). As an example we explore the effect of the size of a drop of water on the observed solid-fluid contact angle. A single coarse-grained bead representing two water molecules and parameterized using the SAFT-\(\gamma\) Mie equation of state (EoS) is employed, meanwhile the solid surfaces are mimicked using integrated potentials. The contact angle is seen to be a strong function of the system size for small nano-droplets. The thermodynamic limit, corresponding to the infinite size (macroscopic) drop is only truly recovered when using an excess of half a million water coarse-grained beads and/or a drop radius of over 26 nm.
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cloud data set
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interfacial tension
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coarse-graining
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water
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line tension
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graphene
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0.7099666595458984
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0.6942794322967529
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0.6902408003807068
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0.6882140636444092
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