Web Release Date: January 23,
Nanomechanical Properties of Arachidic Acid Langmuir-Blodgett Films






CIBER-BBN, Department of Physical Chemistry, Universitat de Barcelona and Bioengineering Institute of Catalonia, Martí i Franquès 1, 08028 Barcelona, Spain, and Department of Chemical Engineering, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Colom 1, 08222 Terrassa (Barcelona), Spain
Received: July 16, 2007
In Final Form: November 15, 2007
Abstract:
The nanomechanical properties of Langmuir-Blodgett monolayers of arachidic acid extracted at surface
pressures of 1, 15, and 35 mN/m and deposited on mica were investigated by atomic force microscopy, force
spectroscopy, and lateral force microscopy. It was experimentally demonstrated that the arachidic acid molecular
orientation depends on the extraction pressure. According to this, tilting angles of 50, 34, and 22
with respect
to the surface perpendicular were detected and identified as conformations that maximize van der Waals
interactions between the arachidic acid alkyl chains. The vertical force needed to puncture the monolayers
with the AFM tip strongly depends on the molecular tilting angles attained at different monolayer extraction
surface pressures, obtaining values that range from 13.07 ± 3.24 nN for 50
to 22.94 ± 5.49 nN for 22
tilting angles. The different molecular interactions involved in the monolayer cohesion are discussed and
quantitatively related to the experimental monolayer breakthrough forces. The friction measurements performed
from low vertical forces up to monolayer disruption reveal the existence of three well-defined regimes: first,
a low friction response due to the elastic deformation of the monolayer, which is followed by a sharp increase
in the friction force due to the onset of a sudden plastic deformation. The last regime corresponds to the
monolayer rupture and the contact between tip and substrate. The friction coefficient of the substrate is seen
to depend on the monolayer extraction pressure, a fact that is discussed in terms of the relationship between
the sample compactness and its rupture mechanism.
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