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Dive into the research topics where Markus Valtiner is active.

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Featured researches published by Markus Valtiner.


Chemical Communications | 2017

Long range electrostatic forces in ionic liquids

Matthew A. Gebbie; Alexander M. Smith; Howard A. Dobbs; Alpha A. Lee; Gregory G. Warr; Xavier Banquy; Markus Valtiner; Mark W. Rutland; Jacob N. Israelachvili; Susan Perkin; Rob Atkin

Ionic liquids are pure salts that are liquid under ambient conditions. As liquids composed solely of ions, the scientific consensus has been that ionic liquids have exceedingly high ionic strengths and thus very short Debye screening lengths. However, several recent experiments from laboratories around the world have reported data for the approach of two surfaces separated by ionic liquids which revealed remarkable long range forces that appear to be electrostatic in origin. Evidence has accumulated demonstrating long range surface forces for several different combinations of ionic liquids and electrically charged surfaces, as well as for concentrated mixtures of inorganic salts in solvent. The original interpretation of these forces, that ionic liquids could be envisioned as dilute electrolytes, was controversial, and the origin of long range forces in ionic liquids remains the subject of discussion. Here we seek to collate and examine the evidence for long range surface forces in ionic liquids, identify key outstanding questions, and explore possible mechanisms underlying the origin of these long range forces. Long range surface forces in ionic liquids and other highly concentrated electrolytes hold diverse implications from designing ionic liquids for energy storage applications to rationalizing electrostatic correlations in biological self-assembly.


Scientific Reports | 2016

The Effect of Water and Confinement on Self-Assembly of Imidazolium Based Ionic Liquids at Mica Interfaces

Hsiu-Wei Cheng; Jan-Niklas Dienemann; Philipp Stock; Claudia Merola; Ying-Ju Chen; Markus Valtiner

Tuning chemical structure and molecular layering of ionic liquids (IL) at solid interfaces offers leverage to tailor performance of ILs in applications such as super-capacitors, catalysis or lubrication. Recent experimental interpretations suggest that ILs containing cations with long hydrophobic tails form well-ordered bilayers at interfaces. Here we demonstrate that interfacial bilayer formation is not an intrinsic quality of hydrophobic ILs. In contrast, bilayer formation is triggered by boundary conditions including confinement, surface charging and humidity present in the IL. Therefore, we performed force versus distance profiles using atomic force microscopy and the surface forces apparatus. Our results support models of disperse low-density bilayer formation in confined situations, at high surface charging and/or in the presence of water. Conversely, interfacial structuring of long-chain ILs in dry environments and at low surface charging is disordered and dominated by bulk structuring. Our results demonstrate that boundary conditions such as charging, confinement and doping by impurities have decisive influence on structure formation of ILs at interfaces. As such, these results have important implications for understanding the behavior of solid/IL interfaces as they significantly extend previous interpretations.


ACS Nano | 2017

Unraveling Hydrophobic Interactions at the Molecular Scale Using Force Spectroscopy and Molecular Dynamics Simulations

Philipp Stock; Jacob I. Monroe; Thomas Utzig; David J. Smith; M. Scott Shell; Markus Valtiner

Interactions between hydrophobic moieties steer ubiquitous processes in aqueous media, including the self-organization of biologic matter. Recent decades have seen tremendous progress in understanding these for macroscopic hydrophobic interfaces. Yet, it is still a challenge to experimentally measure hydrophobic interactions (HIs) at the single-molecule scale and thus to compare with theory. Here, we present a combined experimental-simulation approach to directly measure and quantify the sequence dependence and additivity of HIs in peptide systems at the single-molecule scale. We combine dynamic single-molecule force spectroscopy on model peptides with fully atomistic, both equilibrium and nonequilibrium, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the same systems. Specifically, we mutate a flexible (GS)5 peptide scaffold with increasing numbers of hydrophobic leucine monomers and measure the peptides desorption from hydrophobic self-assembled monolayer surfaces. Based on the analysis of nonequilibrium work-trajectories, we measure an interaction free energy that scales linearly with 3.0-3.4 kBT per leucine. In good agreement, simulations indicate a similar trend with 2.1 kBT per leucine, while also providing a detailed molecular view into HIs. This approach potentially provides a roadmap for directly extracting qualitative and quantitative single-molecule interactions at solid/liquid interfaces in a wide range of fields, including interactions at biointerfaces and adhesive interactions in industrial applications.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

In situ nano- to microscopic imaging and growth mechanism of electrochemical dissolution (e.g., corrosion) of a confined metal surface

Claudia Merola; Hsiu-Wei Cheng; Kai Schwenzfeier; Kai Kristiansen; Ying-Ju Chen; Howard A. Dobbs; Jacob N. Israelachvili; Markus Valtiner

Significance A surface forces apparatus was used with an electrochemical attachment to directly visualize electrochemical reactions, dissolution, and pitting on surfaces when confined in nanoscale gaps (or “crevices”) in real time. The results provide unique insights into how two closely apposed surfaces degrade under confinement, which is different from degradation of surfaces exposed to bulk solution. Degradation proceeds via local nucleation of “pits” at the periphery or center of the “contact area” that rapidly grow outward (in radius) and, more slowly, in depth, until the pits converge and the whole area has become one large pit. The results on a metal–inorganic interface are similar to previous observations on inorganic interfaces, and support a general mechanism of “pitting corrosion” at confined interfaces. Reactivity in confinement is central to a wide range of applications and systems, yet it is notoriously difficult to probe reactions in confined spaces in real time. Using a modified electrochemical surface forces apparatus (EC-SFA) on confined metallic surfaces, we observe in situ nano- to microscale dissolution and pit formation (qualitatively similar to previous observation on nonmetallic surfaces, e.g., silica) in well-defined geometries in environments relevant to corrosion processes. We follow “crevice corrosion” processes in real time in different pH-neutral NaCl solutions and applied surface potentials of nickel (vs. Ag|AgCl electrode in solution) for the mica–nickel confined interface of total area ∼0.03 mm2. The initial corrosion proceeds as self-catalyzed pitting, visualized by the sudden appearance of circular pits with uniform diameters of 6–7 μm and depth ∼2–3 nm. At concentrations above 10 mM NaCl, pitting is initiated at the outer rim of the confined zone, while below 10 mM NaCl, pitting is initiated inside the confined zone. We compare statistical analysis of growth kinetics and shape evolution of individual nanoscale deep pits with estimates from macroscopic experiments to study initial pit growth and propagation. Our data and experimental techniques reveal a mechanism that suggests initial corrosion results in formation of an aggressive interfacial electrolyte that rapidly accelerates pitting, similar to crack initiation and propagation within the confined area. These results support a general mechanism for nanoscale material degradation and dissolution (e.g., crevice corrosion) of polycrystalline nonnoble metals, alloys, and inorganic materials within confined interfaces.


Nature Communications | 2016

Lithium-ion battery electrolyte mobility at nano-confined graphene interfaces.

Boaz Moeremans; Hsiu-Wei Cheng; Qingyun Hu; Hector F. Garces; Nitin P. Padture; Frank Uwe Renner; Markus Valtiner

Interfaces are essential in electrochemical processes, providing a critical nanoscopic design feature for composite electrodes used in Li-ion batteries. Understanding the structure, wetting and mobility at nano-confined interfaces is important for improving the efficiency and lifetime of electrochemical devices. Here we use a Surface Forces Apparatus to quantify the initial wetting of nanometre-confined graphene, gold and mica surfaces by Li-ion battery electrolytes. Our results indicate preferential wetting of confined graphene in comparison with gold or mica surfaces because of specific interactions of the electrolyte with the graphene surface. In addition, wetting of a confined pore proceeds via a profoundly different mechanism compared with wetting of a macroscopic surface. We further reveal the existence of molecularly layered structures of the confined electrolyte. Nanoscopic confinement of less than 4–5u2009nm and the presence of water decrease the mobility of the electrolyte. These results suggest a lower limit for the pore diameter in nanostructured electrodes.


Langmuir | 2018

Effect of Concentration on the Interfacial and Bulk Structure of Ionic Liquids in Aqueous Solution

Hsiu-Wei Cheng; Henning Weiss; Philipp Stock; Ying-Ju Chen; Cindy Rose Reinecke; Jan-Niklas Dienemann; Markus Mezger; Markus Valtiner

Bio and aqueous applications of ionic liquids (IL) such as catalysis in micelles formed in aqueous IL solutions or extraction of chemicals from biologic materials rely on surface-active and self-assembly properties of ILs. Here, we discuss qualitative relations of the interfacial and bulk structuring of a water-soluble surface-active IL ([C8MIm][Cl]) on chemically controlled surfaces over a wide range of water concentrations using both force probe and X-ray scattering experiments. Our data indicate that IL structuring evolves from surfactant-like surface adsorption at low IL concentrations, to micellar bulk structure adsorption above the critical micelle concentration, to planar bilayer formation in ILs with <1 wt % of water and at high charging of the surface. Interfacial structuring is controlled by mesoscopic bulk structuring at high water concentrations. Surface chemistry and surface charges decisively steer interfacial ordering of ions if the water concentration is low and/or the surface charge is high. We also demonstrate that controlling the interfacial forces by using self-assembled monolayer chemistry allows tuning of interfacial structures. Both the ratio of the head group size to the hydrophobic tail volume as well as the surface charging trigger the bulk structure and offer a tool for predicting interfacial structures. Based on the applied techniques and analyses, a qualitative prediction of molecular layering of ILs in aqueous systems is possible.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2017

Adhesive barnacle peptides exhibit a steric-driven design rule to enhance adhesion between asymmetric surfaces

Sangeetha Raman; Lukas Malms; Thomas Utzig; Buddha Ratna Shrestha; Philipp Stock; Shankar Krishnan; Markus Valtiner

Barnacles exhibit superior underwater adhesion simply through sequencing of the 21 proteinogenic amino acids, without post processing or using special amino acids. Here, we measure and discuss the molecular interaction of two distinct and recurring short peptide sequences (Bp1 and Bp2) inspired from the surface binding 19kDa protein from the barnacle attachment interface. Using self-assembled monolayer (SAMs) of known physical and chemical properties on molecularly smooth gold substrates in 5mM NaCl at pH 7.3, (1) the adsorption mechanisms of the barnacle inspired peptides are explored using quartz crystal microbalance, and (2) adhesion mediating properties are measured using the surface force apparatus. The hydrophobic Bp1 peptide with a cysteine residue adsorbs irreversibly onto Au surfaces due to thiol bond formation, while on hydrophobic CH3 SAM surface, the interactions are hydrophobic in nature. Interestingly, Bp2 that contains both hydrophobic and protonated amine units exhibits asymmetric bridging with an exceptionally high adhesion energy up to 100mJ/m2 between mica and both gold and CH3 SAM. Surprisingly on hydrophilic surfaces such as COOH- or OH-SAMs both peptides fail to show any interactions, implying the necessity of surface charge to promote bridging. Our results provide insights into the molecular aspects of manipulating and utilizing barnacle-mediated peptides to promote or inhibit underwater adhesion.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018

Interfacial Layering and Screening Behavior of Glyme-Based Lithium Electrolytes

Maryam Nojabaee; Hsiu-Wei Cheng; Markus Valtiner; Jelena Popovic; Joachim Maier

Understanding of electrical double layers is essential to all electrochemical devices, particularly at high charge carrier concentrations. Using a combined approach (surface force apparatus, zeta potential, infrared spectroscopy), we propose a model for the interfacial structure of triglyme electrolytes on muscovite mica. In contact with the pure triglyme, a brush-like polymeric structure grows on the mica surface. When lithium triflate is present in the triglyme, this structure is suppressed by anion adsorption and an extended double layer is formed. A surprising result of great fundamental significance is that the effective screening length measured by surface force apparatus at considerable lithium triflate concentrations (above 0.2 M) is substantially higher than expected from the Debye-Hückel theory. This suggests a high degree of complex salt association as a novel characteristic feature of salt-containing electrolytes.


Langmuir | 2017

Tether-length dependence of bias in equilibrium free-energy estimates for surface-to-molecule unbinding experiments

Laila Moreno Ostertag; Thomas Utzig; Christine Klinger; Markus Valtiner

The capabilities of atomic force microscopes and optical tweezers to probe unfolding or surface-to-molecule bond rupture at a single-molecular level are widely appreciated. These measurements are typically carried out unidirectionally under nonequilibrium conditions. Jarzynski’s equality has proven useful to relate the work obtained along these nonequilibrium trajectories to the underlying free energy of the unfolding or unbinding process. Here, we quantify biases that arise from the molecular design of the bond rupture experiment for probing surface-to-molecule bonds. In particular, we probe the well-studied amine/gold bond as a function of the linker’s length which is used to anchor the specific amine functionality during a single molecule unbinding experiment. With increasing linker length, we observe a significant increase in the average work spent on polymer stretching and a strongly biased estimated interaction free energy. Our data demonstrate that free energy estimates converge well for linker lengths below 20 nm, where the bias is <10–15%. With longer linkers severe methodical limits of the method are reached, and convergence within a reasonable number of realizations of the bond rupture is not feasible. Our results also provide new insights into stability and work dissipation mechanisms at adhesive interfaces at the single-molecular level, and offer important design and analysis aspects for single-molecular surface-to-molecule experiments.


ChemPhysChem | 2017

Anion Layering and Steric Hydration Repulsion on Positively Charged Surfaces in Aqueous Electrolytes

Qingyun Hu; Christian Weber; Hsiu-Wei Cheng; Frank Uwe Renner; Markus Valtiner

The molecular structure at charged solid/liquid interfaces is vital for many chemical or electrochemical processes, such as adhesion, catalysis, or the stability of colloidal dispersions. How cations influence structural hydration forces and interactions across negatively charged surfaces has been studied in great detail. However, how anions influence structural hydration forces on positively charged surfaces is much less understood. Herein we report force versus distance profiles on freshly cleaved mica using atomic force microscopy with silicon tips. We characterize steric anion hydration forces for a set of common anions (Cl- , ClO4- , NO3- , SO42- and PO43- ) in pure acids at pH ≈1, where protons are the co-ions. Solutions containing anions with low hydration energies exhibit repulsive structural hydration forces, indicating significant ion and/or water structuring within the first 1-2u2005nm on a positively charged surface. We attribute this to specific adsorption effects within the Stern layer. In contrast, ions with high hydration energies show exponentially repulsive hydration forces, indicating a lower degree of structuring within the Stern layer. The presented data demonstrates that anion hydration forces in the inner double layer are comparable to cation hydration forces, and that they qualitatively correlate with hydration free energies. This work contributes to understanding interaction processes in which positive charge is screened by anions within an electrolyte.

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