TY - JOUR
T1 - High-speed directional transport of condensate droplets on superhydrophobic saw-tooth surfaces
AU - Hou, Huimin
AU - Wu, Xiaomin
AU - Hu, Zhifeng
AU - Gao, Sihang
AU - Wu, Yuxi
AU - Lin, Yukai
AU - Dai, Liyu
AU - Zou, Guisheng
AU - Liu, Lei
AU - Yuan, Zhiping
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - Hypothesis: Most droplets on high-efficiency condensing surfaces have radii of less than 100 μm, but conventional droplet transport methods (such as wettability-gradient surfaces and structural-curvature-gradient surfaces) that rely on the unbalanced force of three-phase lines can only transport millimeter-sized droplets efficiently. Regulating high-speed directional transport of condensate droplets is still challenging. Therefore, we present a method for condensate droplet transportation, based on the reaction force of the superhydrophobic saw-tooth surfaces to the liquid bridge, the condensate droplets could be transported at high speed and over long distances. Experiments: The superhydrophobic saw-tooth surfaces are fabricated by femtosecond laser ablation and chemical etching. Condensation experiments and luminescent particle characterization experiments on different surfaces are conducted. Aided by the theoretical analysis, we illustrate the remarkable performance of condensate droplet transportation on saw-tooth surfaces. Findings: Compared with conventional methods, our method improves the transport velocity and relative transport distance by 1–2 orders of magnitude and achieves directional transport of the smallest condensate droplet of about 2 μm. Furthermore, the superhydrophobic saw-tooth surfaces enable multi-hop directional jumping of condensate droplets, leading to cross-scale increases in transport distances from microns to decimeters.
AB - Hypothesis: Most droplets on high-efficiency condensing surfaces have radii of less than 100 μm, but conventional droplet transport methods (such as wettability-gradient surfaces and structural-curvature-gradient surfaces) that rely on the unbalanced force of three-phase lines can only transport millimeter-sized droplets efficiently. Regulating high-speed directional transport of condensate droplets is still challenging. Therefore, we present a method for condensate droplet transportation, based on the reaction force of the superhydrophobic saw-tooth surfaces to the liquid bridge, the condensate droplets could be transported at high speed and over long distances. Experiments: The superhydrophobic saw-tooth surfaces are fabricated by femtosecond laser ablation and chemical etching. Condensation experiments and luminescent particle characterization experiments on different surfaces are conducted. Aided by the theoretical analysis, we illustrate the remarkable performance of condensate droplet transportation on saw-tooth surfaces. Findings: Compared with conventional methods, our method improves the transport velocity and relative transport distance by 1–2 orders of magnitude and achieves directional transport of the smallest condensate droplet of about 2 μm. Furthermore, the superhydrophobic saw-tooth surfaces enable multi-hop directional jumping of condensate droplets, leading to cross-scale increases in transport distances from microns to decimeters.
KW - Condensation
KW - Directional droplet transport
KW - Femtosecond laser ablation
KW - Multi-hop jumping
KW - Superhydrophobic surface
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85163175416&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jcis.2023.06.113
DO - 10.1016/j.jcis.2023.06.113
M3 - Article
C2 - 37352560
AN - SCOPUS:85163175416
SN - 0021-9797
VL - 649
SP - 290
EP - 301
JO - Journal of Colloid and Interface Science
JF - Journal of Colloid and Interface Science
ER -