Interfacial Tension Hysteresis in Oxidizing Eutectic Gallium-Indium
POSTER
Abstract
Eutectic gallium-indium (EGaIn), a room-temperature liquid metal alloy, has the largest interfacial tension of any liquid at room temperature. Under an applied voltage in an electrolytic bath, the anodization of the EGaIn lowers its interfacial tension by orders of magnitude. We observe that the interfacial tension depends not only on the applied potential and the concentration of the sodium hydroxide bath, but also exhibits history-dependence when subjected to voltage sweeps. We examine the origins of these effects as arising from the dissolution rate of the oxide and the reaction rate (measured via current density). We identify four distinct regimes in the interfacial tension's dependence on electric potential, arising from the formation of different oxide species and configurations, and present a model that describes the voltage-dependence of the interfacial tension.
Authors
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Keith D. Hillaire
North Carolina State University
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Minyung Song
North Carolina State University
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William Llanos
Chicago State University
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Abolfazl Kiani
North Carolina State University
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Sahar Rashidnadimi
North Carolina State University
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Michael D. Dickey
North Carolina State University
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Karen Daniels
North Carolina State University