Publication Details |
| Category | Text Publication |
| Reference Category | Journals |
| DOI | 10.1016/j.apsusc.2026.165927 |
Licence ![]() |
|
| Title (Primary) | Adhesion forces between AFM tips and TiO2 nanoparticles to investigate the formation of natural coatings |
| Author | Tayyebi Sabet Khomami, N.; Philippe, A.; Abu Quba, A.A.; Gad, M.
|
| Source Titel | Applied Surface Science |
| Year | 2026 |
| Department | EAC |
| Volume | 726 |
| Page From | art. 165927 |
| Language | englisch |
| Topic | T9 Healthy Planet |
| Supplements | Supplement 1 |
| Keywords | AFM; Adhesion forces; Nanoparticles; Coating; Surface waters; Eco-corona |
| Abstract | When nanoparticles enter aquatic environments, they acquire natural surface coatings (eco-coronas) that govern their fate, transport, and toxicity. This study employs atomic force microscopy (AFM) adhesion force mapping to characterize these coatings following in situ formation under natural conditions. Titanium dioxide nanoparticles (n-TiO2) and flat single-crystal TiO2 substrates (absence of curvature and roughness effects) were exposed to three chemically distinct surface waters, revealing pronounced variability in adhesion force strength, range (min–max differences), and spatial patchiness, nanoscale heterogeneity metrics inaccessible to bulk techniques. Moran’s I analysis of crystal-TiO2 confirmed positive spatial autocorrelation across samples, indicating patchy eco-coronas. Terrestrially dominated water (high DOC, humic-rich) produced the widest adhesion ranges, reflecting polydisperse humic adsorption. Microbial-enriched waters exhibited high adhesion forces comparable to terrestrial waters but lower variability ranges, while calcareous water (high Ca2+, ionic strength) yielded the lowest forces with less ordered spatial patterns. Moreover, sessile drop contact angle measurements on crystals further revealed macroscopic hydrophilicity changes. In addition, complementary analyses of particle size, morphology, surface charge, and functional groups of the exposed nanoparticles to the surface waters provided multi-technique validation of surface modifications. These results establish AFM adhesion mapping as a powerful approach for resolving eco-corona heterogeneity under environmentally relevant conditions. |
| Tayyebi Sabet Khomami, N., Philippe, A., Abu Quba, A.A., Gad, M., Lechtenfeld, O., Hahn, F., Trouillet, V., Guigner, J.-M. (2026): Adhesion forces between AFM tips and TiO2 nanoparticles to investigate the formation of natural coatings Appl. Surf. Sci. 726 , art. 165927 10.1016/j.apsusc.2026.165927 |
|
