Self-removal of condensed water on the legs of water striders 论文

2015Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences引用 249
Surface Modification and SuperhydrophobicityInteractive and Immersive DisplaysAdhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
发表日期
2015-07-13
发表年份
2015

关键词

Surface Modification and SuperhydrophobicityInteractive and Immersive DisplaysAdhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions

摘要

The ability to control drops and their movements on phobic surfaces is important in printing or patterning, microfluidic devices, and water-repellent materials. These materials are always micro-/nanotextured, and a natural limitation of repellency occurs when drops are small enough (as in a dew) to get trapped in the texture. This leads to sticky Wenzel states and destroys the superhydrophobicity of the material. Here, we show that droplets of volume ranging from femtoliter (fL) to microliter (μL) can be self-removed from the legs of water striders. These legs consist of arrays of inclined tapered setae decorated by quasi-helical nanogrooves. The different characteristics of this unique texture are successively exploited as water condenses, starting from self-penetration and sweeping effect along individual cones, to elastic expulsion between flexible setae, followed by removal at the anisotropic leg surface. We envision that this antifogging effect at a very small scale could inspire the design of novel applicable robust water-repellent materials for many practical applications.

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