2018
DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b01314
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DC Electrowetting of Nonaqueous Liquid Revisited by XPS

Abstract: Liquid poly(ethylene glycol) (molecular weight, ∼600 Da) with a low vapor pressure is used as droplets in an ultrahigh-vacuum X-ray photoelectron spectrometer (XPS) chamber with traditional electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) device geometry. We demonstrate that, using XPS data, independent of the sign of the applied voltage, the droplet expands on the substrate with the application of a nonzero voltage and contracts back when the voltage is brought back to zero. However, the main focus of the present investig… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…When an external dc bias is applied to the liquid drop on the dielectric, no measurable current passes (<10 pA), even under dc voltages of as large as 180 V. As a result, both the C 1s and also the O 1s peaks of PEG display trivial potential-dependent shifts of 180.0 ± 0.1 eV in their corresponding measured binding energies as shown explicitly in Figure . The estimated breakdown voltage, 180 ± 20 V (see SI section for details), for this system is consistent with our measurement, which is also consistent with our previously reported measurement on a similar PEG drop on CYTOP. , …”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
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“…When an external dc bias is applied to the liquid drop on the dielectric, no measurable current passes (<10 pA), even under dc voltages of as large as 180 V. As a result, both the C 1s and also the O 1s peaks of PEG display trivial potential-dependent shifts of 180.0 ± 0.1 eV in their corresponding measured binding energies as shown explicitly in Figure . The estimated breakdown voltage, 180 ± 20 V (see SI section for details), for this system is consistent with our measurement, which is also consistent with our previously reported measurement on a similar PEG drop on CYTOP. , …”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…The present work is a continuation of our previous work, where we directly measure the electrical potential developments via recording XPS spectra of a pristine PEG drop on a Teflon-coated SiO 2 /Si substrate under both dc and ac (using square-wave pulses, SQW) low-voltage (10 V) actuations. Afterward, we expose the liquid drop, within the spectrometer, to higher-voltage dc actuations until it undergoes several breakdown events around 200 V. What is different in this work from our previous papers , is that we characterize the postbreakdown system again using the low-voltage actuations, which reveals yet a different asymmetric property with respect to the polarity of the actuation. This postbreakdown asymmetric behavior is different from the prebreakdown contact-angle saturation, often reported in the literature, which was also mentioned above.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 89%
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“…[76][77][78] Within the last three years, we have reintroduced XPS as a powerful analytical arsenal for probing electrical potential developments of liquids and their interfaces with dielectric substrates to extract novel information about them, under in situ and in operando conditions. [37][38][39][40] In order to probe impedance type properties of the samples under investigation, it is necessary to impose a varying frequency (AC) actuation for which the natural choice is a sine-wave. However, as we said earlier, the sine-wave distorts the form of the XP signal, see Figs.…”
Section: B Impedance Like Actuations and A New Perspective To Investigate Electrowetting Phenomenamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…33 We, then, extended it to probing the nature of an electrochemical corrosion process between the ionic liquid and Au electrodes, 34 and finally to detect, in situ, an electrochemically generated carbene formation 35 and its CS 2 adduct. 36 Most recently, we have utilized o-XPS to probe electrowetting properties of ionic and other low-volatile liquids under both DC, 37 and AC (Ref. 38) actuations, in order to extract chemically resolved electrical information of such systems, guided by modeling.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%