One pot synthesis of opposing ‘rose petal’ and ‘lotus leaf’ superhydrophobic materials with zinc oxide nanorods
•One pot synthesis of artificial ‘rose petal’ and ‘lotus leaf’ cloth surfaces from cloth substrates.•ZnO nanorods decorated superhydrophobic cloth through simple hydrothermal process.•Zero adhesion ‘lotus effect’ and strong adhesion ‘rose petal effect’ are described. The synthesis in one pot1One-pot...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of colloid and interface science 2014-02, Vol.415 (415), p.32-38 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •One pot synthesis of artificial ‘rose petal’ and ‘lotus leaf’ cloth surfaces from cloth substrates.•ZnO nanorods decorated superhydrophobic cloth through simple hydrothermal process.•Zero adhesion ‘lotus effect’ and strong adhesion ‘rose petal effect’ are described.
The synthesis in one pot1One-pot synthesis indicates that the two-step chemical synthesis on cloth surfaces was accomplished simultaneously for each cloth in one vessel (or one beaker).1 of opposing ‘rose petal’ and ‘lotus leaf’ superhydrophobic materials from commercially available superhydrophilic cloth substrates of varying texture is described for the first time. Surfaces of ‘rough’ textured cloth and ‘smooth’ textured cloth were simultaneously rendered superhydrophobic by growing zinc oxide (ZnO) nanorods by a hydrothermal process in the same chemical bath. Contact angle hysteresis and water pendant drop tests revealed strong water adhesion to ZnO microrod-treated rough cloth. The combination of water contact angle >150° and strong adhesion is indicative of the ‘rose petal effect’ with potential for water pinning. Smooth cloth with ZnO nanorods exhibited no adhesion to water droplets with facilitative roll-off. The combination of water contact angle >150° and weak to no adhesion with water is indicative of the ‘lotus leaf effect’ with potential for self-cleaning. Pendant water drop tests indicated cohesive failure of water on rough cloth coated with ZnO nanorods. Natural rose petals demonstrated adhesive failure between the petal surface and water droplet. A parsimonious explanation is presented. We also describe the development of superhydrophobic clothes without the need for special conditions or further chemical modification. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9797 1095-7103 1095-7103 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jcis.2013.10.015 |