scholarly journals Towards optimization of patterned superhydrophobic surfaces

2007 ◽  
Vol 4 (15) ◽  
pp. 643-648 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bharat Bhushan ◽  
Michael Nosonovsky ◽  
Yong Chae Jung

Experimental and theoretical study of wetting properties of patterned Si surfaces with cylindrical flat-top pillars of various sizes and pitch distances is presented. The values of the contact angle (CA), contact angle hysteresis (CAH) and tilt angle (TA) are measured and compared with the theoretical values. Transition from the composite solid–liquid–air to the homogeneous solid–liquid interface is investigated. It is found that the wetting behaviour of a patterned hydrophobic surface depends upon a simple non-dimensional parameter, the spacing factor, equal to the pillar diameter divided by the pitch. The spacing factor controls the CA, CAH and TA in the composite interface regime, as well as destabilization and transition to the homogeneous interface. We show that the assumption that the CAH is a consequence of the adhesion hysteresis and surface roughness leads to the theoretical values of the CAH that are in a reasonably good agreement with the experimental values. By decreasing the spacing factor, the values of CA=170°, CAH=5° and TA=3° are achieved. However, with further decreasing of the spacing factor, the composite interface destabilizes.

Langmuir ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 982-986 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Nishiyama ◽  
Yutaka Yamada ◽  
Tatsuya Ikuta ◽  
Koji Takahashi ◽  
Yasuyuki Takata

Micromachines ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 677 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhengyong Huang ◽  
Wenjie Xu ◽  
Yu Wang ◽  
Haohuan Wang ◽  
Ruiqi Zhang ◽  
...  

In this study, we develop a facial one-step approach to prepare durable super-hydrophobic coatings on glass surfaces. The hydrophobic characteristics, corrosive liquid resistance, and mechanical durability of the super-hydrophobic surface are presented. The as-prepared super-hydrophobic surface exhibits a water contact angle (WCA) of 157.2° and contact angle hysteresis of 2.3°. Mico/nano hierarchical structures and elements of silicon and fluorine is observed on super-hydrophobic surfaces. The adhesion strength and hardness of the surface are determined to be 1st level and 4H, respectively. The coating is, thus, capable of maintaining super-hydrophobic state after sand grinding with a load of 200 g and wear distances of 700 mm. The rough surface retained after severe mechanical abrasion observed by atomic force microscope (AFM) microscopically proves the durable origin of the super-hydrophobic coating. Results demonstrate the feasibility of production of the durable super-hydrophobic coating via enhancing its adhesion strength and surface hardness.


Author(s):  
Mercy Dicuangco ◽  
Susmita Dash ◽  
Justin A. Weibel ◽  
Suresh V. Garimella

The ability to control the size, shape, and location of particulate deposits is important in patterning, nanowire growth, sorting biological samples, and many other industrial and scientific applications. It is therefore of interest to understand the fundamentals of particle deposition via droplet evaporation. In the present study, we experimentally probe the assembly of particles on superhydrophobic surfaces by the evaporation of sessile water droplets containing suspended latex particles. Superhydrophobic surfaces are known to result in a significant decrease in the solid-liquid contact area of a droplet placed on such a substrate, thereby increasing the droplet contact angle and reducing the contact angle hysteresis. We conduct experiments on superhydrophobic surfaces of different geometric parameters that are maintained at different surface temperatures. The transient droplet shape and wetting behavior during evaporation are analyzed as a function of substrate temperature as well as surface morphology. During the evaporation process, the droplet exhibits a constant contact radius mode, a constant contact angle mode, or a mixed mode in which the contact angle and contact radius change simultaneously. The evaporation time of a droplet can be significantly reduced with substrate heating as compared to room-temperature evaporation. To describe the spatial distribution of the particle residues left on the surfaces, qualitative and quantitative evaluations of the deposits are presented. The results show that droplet evaporation on superhydrophobic surfaces, driven by mass diffusion under isothermal conditions or by substrate heating, suppresses particle deposition at the contact line. This preempts the so-called coffee-ring and allows active control of the location of particle deposition.


Author(s):  
C. A. Ward

A method for determining the surface tension of solid-fluid interfaces has been proposed. For a given temperature and fluid-solid combination, these surface tensions are expressed in terms of material properties that can be determined by measuring the amount of vapor adsorbed on the solid surface as a function of xV, the ratio of the vapor-phase pressure to the saturation-vapor pressure. The thermodynamic concept of pressure is shown to be in conflict with that of continuum mechanics, but is supported experimentally. This approach leads to the prediction that the contact angle, θ, can only exist in a narrow pressure range and that in this pressure range, the solid-vapor surface tension is constant and equal to the surface tension of the liquid-vapor interface, γLV. The surface tension of the solid-liquid interface, γSL, may be expressed in terms of measurable properties, γLV and θ: γSL = γLV(1 − cosθ). The value of θ is predicted to depend on both the pressure in the liquid at the three-phase, line x3L, and the three-phase line curvature, Ccl. We examine these predictions using sessile water droplets on a polished Cu surface, maintained in a closed, constant volume, isothermal container. The value of θ is found to depend on the adsorption at the solid-liquid interface, nSL = nSL(x3L,Ccl). The predicted value of θ is compared with that measured, and found to be in close agreement, but no effect of line tension is found.


Materials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 787 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federico Veronesi ◽  
Giulio Boveri ◽  
Mariarosa Raimondo

The search for surfaces with non-wetting behavior towards water and low-surface tension liquids affects a wide range of industries. Surface wetting is regulated by morphological and chemical features interacting with liquid phases under different ambient conditions. Most of the approaches to the fabrication of liquid-repellent surfaces are inspired by living organisms and require the fabrication of hierarchically organized structures, coupled with low surface energy chemical composition. This paper deals with the design of amphiphobic metals (AM) and alloys by deposition of nano-oxides suspensions in alcoholic or aqueous media, coupled with perfluorinated compounds and optional infused lubricant liquids resulting in, respectively, solid–liquid–air and solid–liquid–liquid working interfaces. Nanostructured organic/inorganic hybrid coatings with contact angles against water above 170°, contact angle with n-hexadecane (surface tension γ = 27 mN/m at 20 °C) in the 140–150° range and contact angle hysteresis lower than 5° have been produced. A full characterization of surface chemistry has been undertaken by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analyses, while field-emission scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM) observations allowed the estimation of coatings thicknesses (300–400 nm) and their morphological features. The durability of fabricated amphiphobic surfaces was also assessed with a wide range of tests that showed their remarkable resistance to chemically aggressive environments, mechanical stresses and ultraviolet (UV) radiation. Moreover, this work analyzes the behavior of amphiphobic surfaces in terms of anti-soiling, snow-repellent and friction-reduction properties—all originated from their non-wetting behavior. The achieved results make AM materials viable solutions to be applied in different sectors answering several and pressing technical needs.


2009 ◽  
Vol 256 (1) ◽  
pp. 274-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kamil Wojciechowski ◽  
Anna Brzozowska ◽  
Sebastien Cap ◽  
Witold Rzodkiewicz ◽  
Thomas Gutberlet

2005 ◽  
Vol 899 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhinandan Agrawal ◽  
Gareth H. McKinley

AbstractThe formation of nanobubbles at solid-liquid interfaces has been studied using the atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging technique. Nanobubble formation strongly depends on both the hydrophobicity of the solid surface and the polarity of the liquid subphase. While nanobubbles do not form on flat hydrophilic (silicon oxide wafer) surfaces immersed in water, they appear spontaneously at the interface of water against smooth, hydrophobic (silanized wafer) surfaces. From the experimental observations we draw the conclusion that the features observed in the AFM images are deformable, air-filled bubbles. In addition to the hydrophobicity of the solid surface, differences in solubility of air between two miscible fluids can also lead to formation of nanobubbles. We observe that nanobubbles appear at the interface of water against hydrophilic silicon oxide surfaces after in-situ mixing of ethanol and water in the fluid-cell.The shapes of the nanobubbles are well approximated by spherical caps, with width much larger than the height of the caps. We quantify the morphological distribution of nanobubbles by evaluating several important bubble parameters including surface coverage and radii of curvature. In conjunction, with an analytical model available in the literature, we use this information to estimate that the present nanobubble morphology may give rise to slip lengths ∼1–2 µm in pressure driven flows for water flowing over the hydrophobic surface. The consistency of the calculated slip length with the experimental values reported in the literature, suggests that the apparent fluid slip observed experimentally at hydrophobic surfaces may arise from the presence of nanobubbles.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1389 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arif S. Alagoz ◽  
Wisam J. Khudhayer ◽  
Tansel Karabacak

ABSTRACTFrom wings of flies to plant leafs, hydrophobic surfaces are well-common in nature. Many of these surfaces have micro and nano hierarchical structures coated with low surface energy layer. In this work, we mimicked similar structure by fabricating Teflon coated periodic and well-ordered silver nanorod arrays and investigated the effect of nanorod separation on water contact angle (WCA). The silver nanorod arrays were deposited on patterned and flat silicon substrates using glancing angle deposition (GLAD) technique. Then a thin layer of Teflon was deposited on the silver nanorods by small angle deposition (SAD) technique. A systematic increase in water contact angle was observed with increasing nanorod separation which is attributed to the decreased area fraction of solid-liquid interface.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 130006
Author(s):  
Stéphane Dorbolo

Frosted glass is a common, low cost material. Its roughness can be used to control how it is wet by water. In this paper, the wetting properties of silicone oil and water are investigated. For the oil, wetting is total since the oleophilic character of the glass is enhanced by its roughness. Due to the remarkable optical properties of frosted glass, the spreading of oil droplets on its surface was recorded over three months. Frosted glass is a parahydrophilic surface because of its large contact angle hysteresis (up to 80° ). The behaviour of oil and water droplets was compared on a long piece of inclined frosted glass. The trajectories (and the spreading) of the droplets were studied and phenomenological laws were deduced to describe the dependence of the droplet speed on the initial volume of the droplet and the angle of inclination. Such dependences of speed at long travel distances (100 times the capillary length) were deduced and rationalised with a simple model that takes into account the thickness of the wake. Moreover, we analysed the flow inside the wake of water droplets sliding on inclined frosted glass. Suggestions are given on how to exploit drainage of the water droplet wake and the high hysteresis of water within the framework of open microfluidics.


Author(s):  
Matthew A. Trapuzzano ◽  
Rasim Guldiken ◽  
Andrés Tejada-Martínez ◽  
Nathan B. Crane

Many important processes depend on the wetting of liquids on surfaces. Wetting is commonly controlled through material selection, coatings, and/or surface texture, however these means are sensitive to environmental conditions. Some “hydrophobic” fluoropolymer coatings are sensitive to extended water exposure as evidenced by declining contact angles and increasing contact angle hysteresis. Understanding degradation of these coatings is critical to processes that employ them. To accomplish this, contact angle measurements were taken before, during, and after slides coated with FluoroSyl 3750 or Cytop were submerged in water, or vibrated while covered in water. Both methods demonstrated similar changes in advancing contact angle though vibration increased degradation rates significantly. However, it does not simply accelerate the process as different trends are apparent in receding contact angles. The FluoroSyl 3750 showed no clear degradation under either condition. Surface profilometry did not detect any surface morphology differences that might cause contact angle change.


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