论文标题
强烈的电子风在碳表面上流动下的液体流动
Strong electronic winds blowing under liquid flows on carbon surfaces
论文作者
论文摘要
液体和固体之间的界面是在自然过程或技术应用中其特定新出现特性的根源,在纳米级的固有机制的位置。但是,尽管已经深入探索了界面的结构特性和化学性质,但迄今为止,固态电子传输在流体界面上的影响已被广泛忽略。据报道,针对碳基纳米材料(例如碳纳米管或石墨烯片)流动的水确实诱导了电子电流,但处于危险中的机制仍然有争议。在这里,我们通过研究纳米级流动下的电子转化来推出水电耦合的分子机制。我们使用调谐叉原子显微镜(AFM)在多层石墨烯样品上沉积和置换离子和非离子液体的微米液滴,同时记录整个碳薄片的电流。我们报告了振荡诱导的电流的测量值,该电流比以前报道的碳上的水大几个数量级,并通过碳层上的表面皱纹进一步提高。我们的结果表明,流体分子和载体之间的特殊动量转移机制在固体中的声子激发介导的碳壁中。我们的发现通过利用固体中的集体激发与流体中的分子之间的复杂相互作用来利用复杂的相互作用,为在纳米级的积极控制流体转移铺平了道路。
The interface between a liquid and a solid is the location of plethora of intrincate mechanisms at the nanoscale, at the root of their specific emerging properties in natural processes or technological applications. However, while the structural properties and chemistry of interfaces have been intensively explored, the effect of the solid-state electronic transport at the fluid interface has been broadly overlooked up to now. It has been reported that water flowing against carbon-based nanomaterials, such as carbon nanotubes or graphene sheets, does induce electronic currents, but the mechanism at stake remains controversial. Here, we unveil the molecular mechanisms underlying the hydro-electronic couplings by investigating the electronic conversion under flow at the nanoscale. We use a tuning fork-Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) to deposit and displace a micrometric droplet of both ionic and non-ionic liquids on a multilayer graphene sample, while recording the electrical current across the carbon flake. We report measurements of an oscillation-induced current which is several orders of magnitude larger than previously reported for water on carbon , and further boosted by the presence of surface wrinkles on the carbon layer. Our results point to a peculiar momentum transfer mechanism between fluid molecules and charge carriers in the carbon walls mediated by phonon excitations in the solid. Our findings pave the way for active control of fluid transfer at the nanoscale by harnessing the complex interplay between collective excitations in the solid and the molecules in the fluid.