Coalescence-induced droplet jumping has the potential to enhance the efficiency of a plethora of applications. Although binary droplet jumping is quantitatively understood from energy and hydrodynamic perspectives, multiple aspects that affect jumping behavior, including droplet size mismatch, droplet-surface interaction, and condensate thermophysical properties, remain poorly understood. Here, we develop a visualization technique utilizing microdroplet dispensing to study droplet jumping dynamics on nanostructured superhydrophobic, hierarchical superhydrophobic, and hierarchical biphilic surfaces. We show that on the nanostructured superhydrophobic surface the jumping velocity follows inertial-capillary scaling with a dimensionless velocity of 0.26 and a jumping direction perpendicular to the substrate. A droplet mismatch phase diagram was developed showing that jumping is possible for droplet size mismatch up to 70%. On the hierarchical superhydrophobic surface, jumping behavior was dependent on the ratio between the droplet radius R and surface structure length scale L. For small droplets ( R ≤ 5 L), the jumping velocity was highly scattered, with a deviation of the jumping direction from the substrate normal as high as 80°. Surface structure length scale effects were shown to vanish for large droplets ( R > 5 L). On the hierarchical biphilic surface, similar but more significant scattering of the jumping velocity and direction was observed. Droplet-size-dependent surface adhesion and pinning-mediated droplet rotation were responsible for the reduced jumping velocity and scattered jumping direction. Furthermore, droplet jumping studies of liquids with surface tensions as low as 38 mN/m were performed, further confirming the validity of inertial-capillary scaling for varying condensate fluids. Our work not only demonstrates a powerful platform to study droplet-droplet and droplet-surface interactions but provides insights into the role of fluid-substrate coupling as well as condensate properties during droplet jumping.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.8b06677 | DOI Listing |
Molecules
October 2024
Key Laboratory of Textile Science and Technology, Ministry of Education, College of Textiles, Donghua University, Shanghai 201620, China.
With the variety of fibers and fabrics, the studies of the surface structure of the textile yarns, the weave fabric, and their surface wettability are still potential factors to improve and optimize the fog harvesting efficiency. In this work, inspired by the fog harvesting behavior of the desert beetle dorsal surface, a wavy-bumpy structure of post-weave yarn (obtained from woven fabric) was reported to improve large droplet growth (converge) efficiency. In which, this study used tetrabutyl titanate (Ti(OCH)) to waterproof, increase hydrophobicity, and stabilize the surface of yarns and fabric (inspired by the feather structure and lotus leaf surface).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
November 2024
Advanced Materials and Technologies Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061-0238, USA.
Surface condensation is ubiquitous in applications such as power generation and desalination. Nonwetting surfaces have been studied extensively for their dropwise condensation potential with reports of dramatic improvements relative to the classical Nusselt equation for film-wise condensation that has long served as a reference theoretical on the condensation heat transfer coefficient. However, a theoretical on the possible condensation heat transfer over a given surface is not available.
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October 2024
Laboratory of Bioinspired, Bionic, Nano, Meta, Materials & Mechanics, Department of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering, University of Trento, Via Mesiano, 77, 38123 Trento, Italy.
Fascinated by the purple color, water-repellent, and self-cleaning properties of leaves, we studied their morphology, wetting, and condensation frosting. Wax nanotubules confer high contact angles, enabling coalescence-induced condensation droplet (out-of-plane) jumping, which, as known, contributes to slowing down frost. Another type of movement-this time in-plane-becomes predominant in reducing the frosting velocity ( ) within a sub-cooling temperature range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
October 2024
Western Program and Department of Biology, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056, USA. Electronic address:
Ballistic movements in biology are powered by muscle contraction, explosive chemical reactions, the formation and collapse of gas bubbles, merger of fluid droplets, and release of hydrostatic pressure. At the macroscopic end of this kinetic carnival we find jumping fleas, violent spider jaws, shrimp claw hammers, and squirting beetles and cucumbers. The speeds are startling, but the mechanisms seem familiar because they occur on a spatial scale that overlaps with our physical experiences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
December 2024
Institute of Fundamental and Frontier Sciences, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu, 610054, P. R. China.
Material surfaces maintaining a liquid super-repellent is crucial in fields such as anti-fouling, drag reduction, and heat transfer. Superhydrophobic surfaces provide an effective approach but suffer from phase change-induced wetting transitions, hindering their practical applications. In this work, Biphilic armored superhydrophobic surfaces (BASS) are designed by integrating hydrophilic interconnected surface frames with superhydrophobic nanostructures.
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