Issue 15, 2020

Interaction of water with oligo(ethylene glycol) terminated monolayers: wetting versus hydration

Abstract

Biorepulsivity of oligo(ethylene glycol) (OEG) substituted self-assembled monolayers (SAMs), serving as model systems for analogous polymeric surfaces, is generally ascribed to the hydration effect. In this context, we applied temperature-programmed desorption to study interaction of water (D2O) with a series of OH-terminated, OEG-substituted alkanethiolate SAMs with variable length of the OEG strand, defining their biorepulsion behavior. Along with the ice overlayer (wetting phase), growing also on the surface of the analogous non-substituted films, a hydration phase, corresponding to the adsorption of D2O into the OEG matrix, was observed, with a higher desorption energy (12.4 kcal mol−1vs. 10.4 kcal mol−1) and a weight correlating with the length of the OEG strand and, consequently, with biorepulsivity. The formation of hydration phase was found to occur over an activation barrier, presumably by temperature-promoted diffusion from the wetting phase, with this process being additionally enforced by a pre-desorption annealing.

Graphical abstract: Interaction of water with oligo(ethylene glycol) terminated monolayers: wetting versus hydration

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Feb 2020
Accepted
26 Mar 2020
First published
27 Mar 2020

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2020,22, 8088-8095

Interaction of water with oligo(ethylene glycol) terminated monolayers: wetting versus hydration

M. Sayin, A. Nefedov and M. Zharnikov, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2020, 22, 8088 DOI: 10.1039/D0CP00906G

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