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Nanobubbles at the interface between water and a hydrophobic solid
Authors:Zhang Xue Hua  Quinn Anthony  Ducker William A
Affiliation:Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and Particulate Fluid Processing Center, University of Melbourne, Melbourne 3010, Australia.
Abstract:A very thin layer (5-80 nm) of gas phase, consisting of discrete bubbles with only about 40 000 molecules, is quite stable at the interface between a hydrophobic solid and water. We prepare this gas phase from either ambient air or from CO(2)(g) through a solvent exchange method reported previously. In this work, we examine the interface using attenuated total internal reflection infrared spectroscopy. The presence of rotational fine structure in the spectrum of CO(2) and D(2)O proves that molecules are present in the gas phase at the interface. The air bubbles are stable for more than 4 days, whereas the CO(2) bubbles are only stable for 1-2 h. We determine the average gas pressure inside the CO(2) bubbles from the IR spectrum in two ways: from the width of the rotational fine structure (P(gas) < 2 atm) and from the intensity in the IR spectrum (P(gas) = 1.1 +/- 0.4 atm). The small difference in gas pressure between the bubbles and the ambient (1 atm) is consistent with the long lifetime. The dimensions and curvature of a set of individual bubbles was determined by atomic force microscopy. The pressures of individual bubbles calculated from the measured curvature using the Laplace equation fall into the range P(gas) = 1.0-1.7 atm, which is concordant with the average pressure measured from the IR spectrum. We believe that the difference in stability of the CO(2) bubbles and the air bubbles is due to a combination of the much lower pressure of CO(2) in the atmosphere and the greater solubility of CO(2) in water, compared to N(2) and O(2). As expected, smaller bubbles have a shorter average lifetime than larger bubbles, and the average pressure and the curvature of individual bubbles decreases with time. Surface plasmon resonance measurements provide supporting evidence that the film is in the gas state: the thin film has a lower refractive index than water, and there are few common contaminants that satisfy this condition. Interfacial gas bubbles are not ubiquitous on hydrophobic solids: bubble-free and bubble-decorated hydrophobic interfaces can be routinely prepared.
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