Publications by authors named "Huihe Qiu"

Surface modification, such as bioinspired nanostructured doubly reentrant surfaces that have presented superhydrophobic wettability even under low-surface-tension liquid, is a very promising technology for controlling droplet dynamics, heat transfer, and evaporation. In this article, we investigate the interfacial effects of nanostructured doubly reentrant surfaces on the flow behaviors and local concentration evolution during the evaporation of an ethanol/water multicomponent droplet. Using particle image velocimetry (PIV) and novel aggregate-induced emission-based (AIE) techniques, the flow patterns and local concentration distributions on both hydrophobic and nanostructured doubly reentrant surfaces were probed and compared.

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Supercooling of water complicates phase change dynamics, the understanding of which remains limited yet vital to energy-related and aerospace processes. Here, we investigate the freezing and jumping dynamics of supercooled water droplets on superhydrophobic surfaces, induced by a remarkable vaporization momentum, in a low-pressure environment. The vaporization momentum arises from the vaporization at droplet's free surface, progressed and intensified by recalescence, subsequently inducing droplet compression and finally self-jumping.

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The human metabolic rate has attracted increasing interest as it is the most critical parameter in thermal comfort evaluation, a challenging field, while it is always determined imprecisely. The main issue hampering metabolic rate portable measurement is a lack of reliable methods. Current measuring solutions are unsatisfactory because nonportable bulky size systems and disturbance masks are required.

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To meet the clinical status of the wide application of percutaneous mechanical circulatory support, this paper selects the mixed flow blood pump applied with superhydrophobic surface as the research object. The Navier slip model was used to simulate the slip characteristics of superhydrophobic surface, and the effects of the blade wrap angle and the superhydrophobic surface on the performance of the mixed flow blood pump are studied by numerical simulation. The results show that (1) considering the head, hydraulic efficiency, and hemolysis index of the blood pump, the optimal value of the blade wrap angle of the mixed flow blood pump in this paper is 60°.

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Wettability patterning is a promising method to manipulate bubble dynamics in microscale boiling systems, allowing the transfer of large heat fluxes at low wall temperatures. Herein, we experimentally investigate the enhancement of flow boiling through exploitation of contact-line pinning using superbiphilic wettability patterns with a range of geometries and orientations. We compare the boiling performance on symmetrical (i.

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Roughness on hydrophilic surfaces allows for fast propagation of liquids. In this paper, the hypothesis is tested which theorizes that pillar array structures with nonuniform pillar height levels can enhance wicking rates. In this work, within a unit cell, nonuniform micropillars were arranged with one pillar at constant height, while other shorter pillars were varied in height to study these nonuniform effects.

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Flow boiling is a promising method for the cooling of sensitive computational and industrial components, facilitating the transportation of large quantities of heat at near-constant temperature and in a small form factor. The prevention of vapor film formation is a fundamental challenge for the enhancement of boiling systems, and an impetus therefore exists for the discovery of new techniques to segregate nucleating bubbles during their formation. Herein, we utilize the strong capillary forces generated by nanostructures to pin the liquid/vapor interface in three dimensions and thereby control the coalescence and flow interactions of developing bubbles.

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Aim: In order to reduce the blood damage of an artificial heart pump and optimize its hydraulic performance, a centrifugal blood pump with superhydrophobic characteristics is proposed in this study.

Methods: To study the influence of superhydrophobic surface characteristics on the performance of centrifugal blood pumps, the Navier slip model is used to simulate the slip characteristics of superhydrophobic surfaces, which is realized by the user defined function of ANSYS fluent. The user defined functions with different values of slip length are verified by two benchmark solutions of laminar flow and turbulence in the pipeline.

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Surface modification, such as hydrophobic network modification, is very promising technology to control droplet dynamics, heat transfer, and evaporation. However, fundamental mechanisms of how these chemically patterned surfaces affect the droplet evaporation dynamics and predictions of evaporation rates are still lacking. In the present work, we systematically investigated the full process of droplet evaporation dynamics on hydrophobic network surfaces and distinguished four different stages: constant contact line (CCL) stage, constant contact angle (CCA) stage, pattern-pinning (PP) stage, and moving contact line (MCL) stage.

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We investigated the characteristics of interwing aerodynamic interactions across the span of the high aspect ratio, flexible wings of dragonflies under tethered and free-flying conditions. This revealed that the effects of the interactions on the hindwings vary across four spanwise regions. (i) Close to the wing root, a trailing-edge vortex (TEV) is formed by each stroke, while the formation of a leading-edge vortex (LEV) is limited by the short translational distance of the hindwing and suppressed by the forewing-induced flow.

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In the current study, we experimentally investigated the flexibility effects on the aerodynamic performance of flapping wings and the correlation with aspect ratio at angle of attack α  =  45°. The Reynolds number based on the chord length and the wing tip velocity is maintained at Re  =  5.3  ×  10.

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Liquid perfluorocarbon (PFC) nanodroplets may have a better chance to extravasate through inter-endothelial gaps (400-800 nm) into tumor interstitium for extravascular imaging, which holds promise as an innovative strategy for imaging-guided drug delivery, early diagnosis of cancer and minimally invasive treatment of cancer. Currently available emulsion technologies still face challenges in reducing droplet sizes from the microscale to the nanoscale. To control size and ensure monodispersity of PFC nanodroplets, we developed a flame-shaped glass capillary and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) hybrid device that creates a concentric flow of the dispersed phase enclosed by the focusing continuous phase at the cross-junction.

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In this study, the concentration gradient inside evaporating binary sessile droplets of 30, 50, and 60 vol % tetrahydrofuran (THF)/water mixtures was investigated. The 5 μL THF/water droplets were evaporated on a transparent hydrophobic substrate. This is the first demonstration of local concentration mapping within an evaporating binary droplet utilizing the aggregation-induced emission material.

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The evaporation and dynamics of a multicomponent droplet on a heated chemical patterned surface were presented. Comparing to the evaporation process of a multicomponent droplet on a homogenous surface, it is found that the chemical patterned surface can not only enhance evaporation by elongating the contact line, but also change the evaporation process from three regimes for the homogenous surface including constant contact line (CCL) regime, constant contact angle (CCA) regime and mix mode (MM) to two regimes, i.e.

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We present a novel plasmapheresis device designed for a fully integrated point-of-care blood analysis microsystem. In the device, fluidic microchannels exhibit a characteristic cross-sectional profile arising from distinct three-dimensional (3D) microelectrodes featuring sidewall undercuts readily integrated through a single-mask process. The structure leverages mainly electrothermal convective rolls that efficiently manifest themselves in physiological fluids and yet have received inadequate attention for the application of plasmapheresis due to concerns over Joule heating.

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The coalescence process of oppositely charged drops for different electrical conductivities of liquids is presented. When the electrical conductivity was relatively low, oppositely charged drops failed to coalesce under sufficiently high electrical fields and capillary ripples were formed on the surfaces of droplets after rebound. For a high electrically conductive liquid, it was found that a crown profile of drop fission always appeared on the top surface of negatively charged drops after the two charged drops contacted and bounced off.

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Local control of droplet formation with acoustic actuation in a microfluidic flow-focusing device is investigated, and the effects of acoustic voltage, frequency, flow-rate ratio, fluid viscosity, and flow vorticity are characterized. Acoustic actuation is provided to affect droplet breakup in the squeezing regime by imposing periodic oscillation to the fluid-fluid interface and, therefore, a periodic change in its curvature at the cross-junction of the device. Time reduction is observed for the three key stages of droplet breakup in the squeezing regime: dispersed phase flow-front advancement into the orifice, pressure buildup upstream and within the orifice together with liquid inflation downstream, and finally the thinning and pinch-off of the liquid thread.

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A 2D fringe probing transient temperature measurement technique based on photothermal deflection theory was developed. It utilizes material's refractive index dependence on temperature gradient to obtain temperature information from laser deflection. Instead of single beam, this method applies multiple laser beams to obtain 2D temperature information.

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An optical diagnostic technique has been developed to measure the gas-liquid interfacial film thickness in microcapillary two-phase flows. The spatial frequencies from the multiscattering measured with a CCD camera are used to determine the slug diameter and film thickness. It is found that, with an optimized optical orientation angle, the spatial frequency method shows great accuracy in the measurements.

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Measurements of bubble size and velocity in multiphase flows are important in much research and many industrial applications. It has been found that high-order refractions have great impact on microbubble sizing by use of phase-Doppler anemometry (PDA). The problem has been investigated, and a model of phase-size correlation, which also takes high-order refractions into consideration, is introduced to improve the accuracy of bubble sizing.

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A novel method is developed to improve the accuracy of micro-resolution particle image velocimetry (PIV) in microfluidics measurements. This method utilizes the Laplacian of Gaussian method and image-processing techniques to eliminate the background scattering noise. A high signal-to-noise ratio image has been obtained.

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