Phys. Rev. B 75, 115415 (2007) [6 pages]Structured and viscous water in subnanometer gapsReceived 18 October 2006; published 15 March 2007 Direct and simultaneous measurements of the normal and lateral forces encountered by a nanosize spherical silicon tip approaching a solid surface in purified water are reported. For tip-surface distances, 0±0.03 nm<d<2 nm, experiments and grand canonical molecular-dynamics simulations find oscillatory solvation forces for hydrophilic surfaces, mica and glass, and less pronounced oscillations for a hydrophobic surface, graphite. The simulations reveal layering of the confined water density and the development of hexagonal order in layers proximal to a quartz surface. For subnanometer hydrophilic confinement, the lateral force measurements show orders of magnitude increase of the viscosity with respect to bulk water, agreeing with a simulated sharp decrease in the diffusion constant. No viscosity increase is observed for hydrophobic surfaces. © 2007 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.75.115415
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.75.115415
PACS:
68.08.−p, 61.46.−w, 62.10.+s, 66.20.+d
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