Droplet motion on contrasting striated surfaces

Liquid droplets move readily under the influence of surface tension gradients on their substrates. Substrates decorated with parallel microgrooves, or striations, presenting the advantage of homogeneous chemical properties yet varying the topological characteristics on either side of a straight-line...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied physics letters 2020-06, Vol.116 (25)
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Hongyu, Orejon, Daniel, Mackenzie-Dover, Coinneach, Valluri, Prashant, Shanahan, Martin E. R., Sefiane, Khellil
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container_issue 25
container_start_page
container_title Applied physics letters
container_volume 116
creator Zhao, Hongyu
Orejon, Daniel
Mackenzie-Dover, Coinneach
Valluri, Prashant
Shanahan, Martin E. R.
Sefiane, Khellil
description Liquid droplets move readily under the influence of surface tension gradients on their substrates. Substrates decorated with parallel microgrooves, or striations, presenting the advantage of homogeneous chemical properties yet varying the topological characteristics on either side of a straight-line boundary, are considered in this study. The basic type of geometry consists of hydrophobic micro-striations/rails perpendicular to the boundary, with the systematic variation of the width to spacing ratio, thus changing the solid–liquid contact fraction and inducing a well-defined wettability contrast across the boundary. Droplets in the Cassie–Baxter state, straddling the boundary, move along the wettability contrast in order to reduce the overall surface free energy. The results show the importance of the average solid fraction and contrasting fraction in a wide range of given geometries across the boundary on droplet motion. A unified criterion for contrasting striated surfaces, which describes the displacement and the velocity of the droplets, is suggested, providing guidelines for droplet manipulation on micro-striated/railed surfaces.
doi_str_mv 10.1063/5.0009364
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source AIP Journals Complete; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Applied physics
Chemical properties
Droplets
Engineering Sciences
Free energy
Striations
Substrates
Surface tension
Wettability
title Droplet motion on contrasting striated surfaces
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