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- 2008 Annual Meeting
- Engineering Sciences and Fundamentals
- Fundamentals of Interfacial Phenomena III
- (347e) Adhesion and Detachment Mechanisms of Polymer Thin Films
The dynamics of adhesion (coalescence or spreading) of polymer melt surfaces and films has also been studied in detail. A new type of self-organized periodic transient surface fingering pattern and instability was found to generally exist during the adhesive contact and coalescence of two polymer films, which eventually disappeared, leaving smooth polymer-air interfaces. The life-times of the transient well-ordered patterns mainly depend on the viscosities and film thickness of the polymers. Such transient fingering instabilities may also generally exist in biological surface interactions such as lipid vesicle-vesicle adhesion and coalescence, bilayer and biomembrane interactions, cell-solid adhesion/binding, and cell-cell coalescence, which could be important to fully understand the mechanisms of these biological surface interactions.