Issue 46, 2021

Unexpected hydrophobicity on self-assembled monolayers terminated with two hydrophilic hydroxyl groups

Abstract

Current major approaches to access surface hydrophobicity include directly introducing hydrophobic nonpolar groups/molecules onto the surface or elaborately fabricating surface roughness. Here, for the first time, molecular dynamics simulations show an unexpected hydrophobicity with a contact angle of 82° on a flexible self-assembled monolayer terminated only with two hydrophilic OH groups ((OH)2-SAM). This hydrophobicity, verified by a water slip phenomenon characterizing the friction on the (OH)2-SAM surface, is attributed to the formation of a hexagonal-ice-like H-bonding structure in the OH matrix of (OH)2-SAM, which sharply reduces the hydrogen bonds between the surface and the water molecules above. The unique simple interface presented here offers a significant molecular-level platform for examining the bio-interfacial interactions ranging from biomolecule binding to cell adhesion.

Graphical abstract: Unexpected hydrophobicity on self-assembled monolayers terminated with two hydrophilic hydroxyl groups

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Aug 2021
Accepted
31 Oct 2021
First published
04 Nov 2021

Nanoscale, 2021,13, 19604-19609

Unexpected hydrophobicity on self-assembled monolayers terminated with two hydrophilic hydroxyl groups

D. Mao, X. Wang, Y. Wu, Z. Gu, C. Wang and Y. Tu, Nanoscale, 2021, 13, 19604 DOI: 10.1039/D1NR05048F

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