Quantifying density fluctuations in water at a hydrophobic surface: evidence for critical drying
Abstract
Employing smart Monte Carlo sampling techniques within the grand canonical ensemble, we investigate the properties of water at a model hydrophobic substrate. By reducing the strength of substrate-water attraction we find that fluctuations in the local number density, quantified by a rigorous definition of the local compressibility (z), increase rapidly for distances z within 1 or 2 molecular diameters from the substrate as the degree of hydrophobicity, measured by the macroscopic contact angle θ, increases. Our simulations provide evidence for a continuous (critical) drying transition as the substrate-water interaction becomes very weak: (θ) -1. We speculate that the existence of such a transition might account for earlier simulation observations of strongly enhanced density fluctuations.
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