Login / Signup

Quasi-stabilized hydration layers on muscovite mica under a thin water film grown from humid air.

Toyoko AraiKohei SatoAsuka IidaMasahiko Tomitori
Published in: Scientific reports (2017)
The interfaces between solids and water films in air play fundamental roles in physicochemical phenomena, biological functions, and nano-fabrication. Though the properties of the interfaces have been considered to be irrelevant to the water film thickness, we found distinctive mechanical features of the interface between a cleaved muscovite mica surface and a thin water film grown in humid air, dissimilar to those in bulk water, using frequency-modulation atomic force microscopy. The thin water film grew with quasi-stabilized hydration networks of water molecules, tightly bound each other at the interface, to a thickness of ~2 nm at near-saturating humidity. Consequently, defective structures of the hydration networks persisted vertically through the hydration layers at the interface, and K+ ions on the cleaved surface remained without dissolution into the water film. The results provide atomistic insights into thin water films in regard to epitaxial-like growth from vapour and the motion of water molecules and ions therein.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • atomic force microscopy
  • optical coherence tomography
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • photodynamic therapy
  • aqueous solution