Understanding and manipulating fluids at the nanoscale is a matter of growing scientific and technological interest. Here we show that the viscous shear forces in nanoconfined water can be orders of magnitudes larger than in bulk water if the confining surfaces are hydrophilic, whereas they greatly decrease when the surfaces are increasingly hydrophobic. This decrease of viscous forces is quantitatively explained with a simple model that includes the slip velocity at the water surface interface. The same effect is observed in the energy dissipated by a tip vibrating in water perpendicularly to a surface. Comparison of the experimental data with the model shows that interfacial viscous forces and compressive dissipation in nanoconfined water...
We use molecular dynamics simulations to study thermal sliding of two nanostructured surfaces separa...
We use molecular dynamics simulations to study thermal sliding of two nanostructured surfaces separa...
The nanofluidics is characterized by a large surface-to-volume ratio, so that the surface properties...
Understanding and manipulating fluids at the nanoscale is a matter of growing scientific and technol...
Understanding and manipulating fluids at the nanoscale is a matter of growing scientific and technol...
The viscous properties of nanoscopically confined water are important when hydrated surfaces in clos...
The rate of water flow through hydrophobic nanocapillaries is greatly enhanced as compared to that e...
Structured hydrophobic surfaces may present high wall slippage due to the microscopic details of wet...
Structured hydrophobic surfaces may present high wall slippage due to the microscopic details of wet...
Structured hydrophobic surfaces may present high wall slippage due to the microscopic details of wet...
Structured hydrophobic surfaces may present high wall slippage due to the microscopic details of wet...
Using molecular dynamics simulations of an atomistic water model, we study the interfacial hydrodyna...
Understanding fluid and interfacial properties in extended nanospace (10–1000 nm) is important for r...
We study the effect of atomic-scale surface-lubricant interactions on nanoscale boundary-lubricated ...
We study the effect of atomic-scale surface-lubricant interactions on nanoscale boundary-lubricated ...
We use molecular dynamics simulations to study thermal sliding of two nanostructured surfaces separa...
We use molecular dynamics simulations to study thermal sliding of two nanostructured surfaces separa...
The nanofluidics is characterized by a large surface-to-volume ratio, so that the surface properties...
Understanding and manipulating fluids at the nanoscale is a matter of growing scientific and technol...
Understanding and manipulating fluids at the nanoscale is a matter of growing scientific and technol...
The viscous properties of nanoscopically confined water are important when hydrated surfaces in clos...
The rate of water flow through hydrophobic nanocapillaries is greatly enhanced as compared to that e...
Structured hydrophobic surfaces may present high wall slippage due to the microscopic details of wet...
Structured hydrophobic surfaces may present high wall slippage due to the microscopic details of wet...
Structured hydrophobic surfaces may present high wall slippage due to the microscopic details of wet...
Structured hydrophobic surfaces may present high wall slippage due to the microscopic details of wet...
Using molecular dynamics simulations of an atomistic water model, we study the interfacial hydrodyna...
Understanding fluid and interfacial properties in extended nanospace (10–1000 nm) is important for r...
We study the effect of atomic-scale surface-lubricant interactions on nanoscale boundary-lubricated ...
We study the effect of atomic-scale surface-lubricant interactions on nanoscale boundary-lubricated ...
We use molecular dynamics simulations to study thermal sliding of two nanostructured surfaces separa...
We use molecular dynamics simulations to study thermal sliding of two nanostructured surfaces separa...
The nanofluidics is characterized by a large surface-to-volume ratio, so that the surface properties...