Wetting of dehydrated Pseudomonas fluorescens biofilms grown on glass substrates by an external liquid is employed as a means to investigate the complex morphology of these biofilms along with their capability to interact with external fluids. The porous structure left behind after dehydration induces interesting droplet spreading on the external surface and imbibition into pores upon wetting. Static contact angles and volume loss by imbibition measured right upon droplet deposition indicate that biofilms of higher incubation times show a higher porosity and effective hydrophilicity. Furthermore, during subsequent rotation tests, using Kerberos device, these properties dictate a peculiar forced wetting/spreading behavior. As rotation speed increases a long liquid tail forms progressively at the rear part of the droplet, which stays pinned at all times, while only the front part of the droplet depins and spreads. Interestingly, the experimentally determined retention force for the onset of droplet sliding on biofilm external surface is lower than that on pure glass. An effort is made to describe such complex forced wetting phenomena by presenting apparent contact angles, droplet length, droplet shape contours, and edges position as obtained from detailed image analysis

Wetting of Dehydrated Hydrophilic Pseudomonas fluorescens Biofilms under the Action of External Body Forces

Federica Recupido;
2021

Abstract

Wetting of dehydrated Pseudomonas fluorescens biofilms grown on glass substrates by an external liquid is employed as a means to investigate the complex morphology of these biofilms along with their capability to interact with external fluids. The porous structure left behind after dehydration induces interesting droplet spreading on the external surface and imbibition into pores upon wetting. Static contact angles and volume loss by imbibition measured right upon droplet deposition indicate that biofilms of higher incubation times show a higher porosity and effective hydrophilicity. Furthermore, during subsequent rotation tests, using Kerberos device, these properties dictate a peculiar forced wetting/spreading behavior. As rotation speed increases a long liquid tail forms progressively at the rear part of the droplet, which stays pinned at all times, while only the front part of the droplet depins and spreads. Interestingly, the experimentally determined retention force for the onset of droplet sliding on biofilm external surface is lower than that on pure glass. An effort is made to describe such complex forced wetting phenomena by presenting apparent contact angles, droplet length, droplet shape contours, and edges position as obtained from detailed image analysis
2021
Istituto per i Polimeri, Compositi e Biomateriali - IPCB - Sede Secondaria di Napoli (Portici)
Amorphous materials, biofilms, hydrophilicity, liquids, wetting
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/539879
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