The current broad interest in wetting characterization of solid surfaces is driven by recent advances in the formulation of surfaces and coatings that are superhydrophobic, superhydrophilic, oleophobic, oleophilic and so on. Unfortunately, the contact angle data presented in many publications raise some concerns among the surface chemists and physicists who work with contact angle measurement techniques on a regular basis. In those articles, best practices are often ignored, and the data presented are limited to the static contact angles measured for small droplets, a few times smaller than typically recommended. The reported contact angles are neither advancing nor receding, and their reproducibility in different laboratories is therefore questionable. In this note, guidelines to measurements of reproducible and reliable advancing and receding contact angles are summarized.
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December 2013
Brief Report|
December 01 2013
Guidelines to measurements of reproducible contact angles using a sessile-drop technique Available to Purchase
Jaroslaw Drelich, PhD
Jaroslaw Drelich, PhD
*
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI, USA
*Corresponding author e-mail address: jwdrelic@mtu.edu
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*Corresponding author e-mail address: jwdrelic@mtu.edu
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
May 09 2013
Accepted:
June 11 2013
Online ISSN: 2050-6260
Print ISSN: 2050-6252
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2013
Surface Innovations (2013) 1 (4): 248–254.
Article history
Received:
May 09 2013
Accepted:
June 11 2013
Citation
Drelich J (2013), "Guidelines to measurements of reproducible contact angles using a sessile-drop technique". Surface Innovations, Vol. 1 No. 4 pp. 248–254, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/si.13.00010
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