Publications by authors named "Pablo F Ibanez-Ibanez"

Article Synopsis
  • The research explores the design of ice-repellent surfaces using a combination of soft and rigid materials to improve durability while enhancing ice detachment mechanisms.
  • By fabricating model surfaces with varying rigid-soft ratios and discontinuity lengths, the study measures ice adhesion and analyzes how ice interacts with these surfaces through both experimental and numerical methods.
  • Key findings reveal that stress concentration at the edges of rigid-soft interfaces leads to effective crack propagation, promoting ice detachment and reducing adhesion, highlighting the role of discontinuities in this process.
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Hypothesis: Soft materials are promising candidates for designing passive de-icing systems. It is unclear whether low adhesion on soft surfaces is due to elasticity or lubrication, and how these properties affect the ice detachment mechanism. This study presents a systematic analysis of ice adhesion on soft materials with different lubricant content to better understand the underpinning interaction.

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The petal effect is identified as a non-wetting state with high drop adhesion. The wetting behavior of petal surfaces is attributed to the papillose structure of their epidermis, which leads to a Cassie-Baxter regime combined with strong pinning sites. Under this scenario, sessile drops are pearl shaped and, unlike lotus-like surfaces, firmly attached to the surface.

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Elastomeric surfaces and oil-infused elastic surfaces reveal low ice adhesion, in part because of their deformability. However, these soft surfaces might jeopardize their mechanical durability. In this work, we analyzed the mechanical durability of elastic polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) surfaces with different balances between elasticity and deicing performances.

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Hypothesis: Ice adhesion to rigid materials is reduced with low energy surfaces of high receding contact angles. However, their adhesion strength values are above the threshold value to be considered as icephobic materials. Surface deformability is a promising route to further reduce ice adhesion.

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Hypothesis: Characterization of contact angle hysteresis on soft surfaces is sensitive to the measurement protocol and might present adventitious time-dependencies. Contact line dynamics on solid surfaces is altered by the surface chemistry, surface roughness and/or surface elasticity. We observed a "slow" spontaneous relaxation of static water sessile drops placed on elastic surfaces.

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Despite the remarkable advances in mitigating ice formation and accretion, however, no engineered anti-icing surfaces today can durably prevent frost formation, droplet freezing, and ice accretion in an economical and ecofriendly way. Herein, sustainable and low-cost electrolyte hydrogel (EH) surfaces are developed by infusing salted water into a hydrogel matrix for avoiding icing. The EH surfaces can both prevent ice/frost formation for an extremely long time and reduce ice adhesion strength to ultralow value (Pa-level) at a tunable temperature window down to -48.

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The analysis of wetting properties of superhydrophobic surfaces may be a difficult task due to the restless behavior of drops on this type of surfaces and the limitations of goniometry for high contact angles. A method to validate the performance of superhydrophobic surfaces, rather than standard goniometry, is required. In this work, we used bouncing drop dynamics as a useful tool to predict the water repellency of different superhydrophobic surfaces.

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