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During urethral catheterization, sliding friction can cause discomfort and even hemorrhaging. In this report, we use a lubricant-impregnated polydimethylsiloxane coating to reduce the sliding friction of a catheter. Using a pig urethra attached to a microforce testing system, we found that a lubricant-impregnated catheter reduces the sliding friction during insertion by more than a factor of two. This suggests that slippery, lubricant-impregnated surfaces have the potential to enhance patient comfort and safety during catheterization.
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Existing oil-water filtration techniques require gravity or a pump as the driving force for separation. Here, we demonstrate transpiration-powered oil-water filtration using a synthetic tree, which operates pumplessly and against gravity. From top to bottom, our synthetic tree was composed of: a nanoporous "leaf" to generate suction via evaporation, a vertical array of glass tubes serving as the tree's xylem conduits, and filters attached to the tube inlets to act as the oil-excluding roots. When placing the tree in an oil emulsion bath, filtrate samples were measured to be 97-98% pure water using gravimetry and refractometry. The spontaneous oil-water separation offered by synthetic trees could be useful for applications such as oil spill cleanup, wastewater purification, and oil extraction.
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Cryomicroscopy is commonly hampered by frost accumulation, reducing the visual clarity of the specimen. Pulling a vacuum or purging with nitrogen gas can greatly reduce the sample chamber's humidity, but at cryogenic temperatures, even minute concentrations of water vapor can still result in frost deposition. Here, a hygroscopic ice frame was created around the specimen to suppress frost growth during cryomicroscopy. Specifically, fluorescently tagged rat brain vessels were frozen on a silicon nitride window with an ice frame, and the luminescence of the fluorescent tag was improved by a factor of 6 compared to a similar specimen in only a nitrogen purge environment. These findings suggest that the simple implementation of a hygroscopic ice frame surrounding the specimen can substantially improve the visual clarity for cryomicroscopy, beyond that of a vacuum or nitrogen purge system.
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Fog harps effectively drain small droplets, which prevents clogging and results in more water harvested from fog compared to mesh nets. However, the dynamics of fog droplets coalescing and sliding down a vertical wire remain poorly understood. Here, we develop an analytical model that captures the physics of fog droplets draining down a single vertical wire. The driving forces are gravity and the surface energy released from coalescence events, whereas the dominant resisting forces are revealed to be inertia, contact angle hysteresis, and local viscous dissipation within the droplet's receding wedge. The average sliding velocity of fog droplets on a Teflon-coated wire was only half that of an uncoated stainless steel wire, due to non-coalescence events exclusive to the hydrophobic wire disrupting the momentum of droplet sliding.
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We investigate the arrested spreading of room temperature droplets impacting flat ice. The use of an icy substrate eliminates the nucleation energy barrier, such that a freeze front can initiate as soon as the droplet's temperature cools down to 0 °C. We employ scaling analysis to rationalize distinct regimes of arrested hydrodynamics. For gently deposited droplets, capillary-inertial spreading is halted at the onset of contact line freezing, yielding a 1/7 scaling law for the arrested diameter. At low impact velocities (Weâ²100), inertial effects result in a 1/2 scaling law. At higher impact velocities (We>100), inertio-viscous spreading can spill over the frozen base of the droplet until its velocity matches that of a kinetic freeze front caused by local undercooling, resulting in a 1/5 scaling law.
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Wheat and other staple crops are devastated by fungal diseases. Many fungal plant pathogens are spread via active or passive discharge of microscopic spores. Here, we described the unique transport of spores of the fungal pathogen Epicoccum tritici, causal agent of black sooty mould, on wheat awns. The unique multi-scale architecture of wheat awns, coupled with condensation and evaporation of dew droplets, facilitated the transport and agglomeration of spores of the fungus. First, dew droplets spontaneously transported spores from the tips of awn hairs to the neighbouring stomatal ridges, driven by gradients in Laplace pressure and surface wettability. Subsequently, spores agglomerated into dry clusters due to the Cheerios effect and evaporation, increasing the likelihood of passive spore removal via wind shear and/or rainsplash. Future plant breeding approaches should consider the development of modified spike structures, such as those without awns or awn hairs, to reduce the potential for spread of fungal plant pathogens.
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Hojas de la Planta , Triticum , Productos Agrícolas , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Hojas de la Planta/microbiología , Esporas Fúngicas , Triticum/microbiología , VientoRESUMEN
Inspired by mangrove trees, we present a theoretical design and analysis of a portable desalinating water bottle powered by transpiration. The bottle includes an annular fin for absorbing solar heat, which is used to boost the evaporation rate of water from the interior synthetic leaf. This synthetic leaf comprises a nanoporous film deposited atop a supporting micromesh. Water evaporating from the leaf generates a highly negative Laplace pressure, which pulls the overlying source water across an upstream reverse osmosis membrane. Evaporated water is re-condensed in the bottom of the bottle for collection. The benefit of our hybrid approach to desalination is that reverse osmosis is spontaneously enabled by transpiration, while the thermal evaporation process is enhanced by heat localization and made more durable by pre-filtering the salt. We estimate that a 9.4 cm diameter bottle, with a 10 cm wide annular fin, could harvest about a liter of fresh water per day from ocean water.
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We develop a novel approach to suspend ice in the air-trapping Cassie state without requiring any fragile hydrophobic coatings or nanostructures. First, frost was preferentially grown on the tops of hydrophilic aluminum pillars due to their sharp corners and elevation over the noncondensable gas barrier. Subsequently, Cassie ice was formed by virtue of the impacting droplets getting arrested by the upper frost tips. A scaling model reveals that the dynamic pressure of an impacting droplet causes the water to wick inside the porous frost faster than the timescale to impale between the pillars.
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It has recently been demonstrated that harps harvest substantively more fog water than conventional mesh nets, but the optimal design for fog harps remains unknown. Here, we systematically vary key parameters of a scale-model fog harp, the wire material, wire pitch, and wire length, to find the optimal combination. We found stainless steel to not only be the best hydrophilic wire material but also nearly be as effective as Teflon-coated wires. The best choice for the wire pitch was coupled to the wire length, as the smallest pitch collected the most water for short harps but was hampered by tangling for taller harps. Accordingly, we use an elastocapillary wire tangling model to successfully predict the onset of tangling beyond a critical length for any given wire pitch. Combining what we learned, we achieved a water harvesting efficiency of 17% with an optimized stainless-steel harp, over three times higher than that of the current standard of a Raschel mesh. These results suggest that an optimal fog harp should feature high-tension, uncoated wires within a large aspect ratio frame to avoid tangling and promote efficient and reliable fog harvesting.
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Plant pathogens are responsible for the annual yield loss of crops worldwide and pose a significant threat to global food security. A necessary prelude to many plant disease epidemics is the short-range dispersal of spores, which may generate several disease foci within a field. New information is needed on the mechanisms of plant pathogen spread within and among susceptible plants. Here, we show that self-propelled jumping dew droplets, working synergistically with low wind flow, can propel spores of a fungal plant pathogen (wheat leaf rust) beyond the quiescent boundary layer and disperse them onto neighboring leaves downwind. An array of horizontal water-sensitive papers was used to mimic healthy wheat leaves and showed that up to 25 spores/h may be deposited on a single leaf downwind of the infected leaf during a single dew cycle. These findings reveal that a single dew cycle can disperse copious numbers of fungal spores to other wheat plants, even in the absence of rain splash or strong gusts of wind.
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Hongos/fisiología , Interacciones Huésped-Patógeno , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Lluvia , Esporas Fúngicas/fisiología , Triticum/microbiología , Viento , Hojas de la Planta/microbiologíaRESUMEN
Thermoelectric effects of ice play an important role in many natural and engineering phenomena. We investigate, numerically and analytically, the electrification of finite-thickness ice slabs due to an imposed temperature difference across them. When exposed to a temperature gradient, thermoelectrification involves a fast initial stage dominated by Bjerrum defects and a subsequent slow stage driven by ionic defects. The time scales of the first and second stages are derived analytically and correspond to the Debye time scales based on the density of Bjerrum and ionic defects, respectively. For a given ice slab, at the steady state, the thermovoltage across it and the charge accumulation near its two ends depend strongly on its thickness, with the sensitivity of the thermovoltage being more pronounced. The discrepancy between the computed thermovoltage and experimental measurements is analyzed. The analysis shows that, although thermoelectric effects in ice were discovered 50 years ago, significant gaps, ranging from the bulk and interfacial properties of defects to the measurement of thermovoltage, exist in the quantitative understanding of these effects. Filling these gaps requires further experimental, theoretical, and computational studies.
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Inspired by ducks, we demonstrate that air pockets within stacked layers of porous superhydrophobic feathers can withstand up to five times more water pressure compared to a single feather. In addition to natural duck feathers, this "layer effect" was replicated with synthetic feathers created by laser cutting micrometric slots into aluminum foil and imparting a superhydrophobic nanostructure. It was revealed that adding layers promotes an increasingly redundant pathway for water impalement, which serves to pressurize the enclosed air pockets. This was validated by creating a probabilistic pore impalement model and also by filling the feathers with an incompressible oil, rather than air, to suppress the layer effect. In addition to revealing a utility of natural duck feathers, our findings suggest that multilayered engineered surfaces can maintain air pockets at high pressures, useful for reducing the drag and fouling of marine structures or enhancing desalination membranes.
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The electrification of ice has been a subject of research since 1940, mostly in the context of charge generation in thunderstorms. This generation of electric charge is spontaneous, distinct from applying an external electric field to affect the diffusive growth of ice crystals. Here, we exploit the spontaneous electrification of ice to reveal a surprising phenomenon of jumping frost dendrites. We use side-view high-speed imaging to experimentally observe frost dendrites breaking off from mother dendrites and/or the substrate to jump out-of-plane toward an opposing polar liquid. Analytical and numerical models are then developed to estimate the attractive force between the frost dendrites and liquid, in good agreement with the experimental results. These models estimate the extent of charge separation within a growing sheet of frost, which is caused by mismatches in the mobilities of the charge carriers in ice. Our findings show that the unexpected jumping frost event can serve as a model system for resolving long-standing questions in atmospheric physics regarding charge separation in ice, while also having potential as a deicing construct.
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The vapor pressure above ice is lower than that above supercooled water at the same temperature. This inherent hygroscopic quality of ice has recently been exploited to suppress frost growth by patterning microscopic ice stripes along a surface. These vapor-attracting ice stripes prevented condensation frosting from occurring in the intermediate regions; however, the required presence of the sacrificial ice stripes made it impossible to achieve the ideal case of a completely dry surface. Here, we decouple the sacrificial ice from the antifrosting surface by holding an uncoated aluminum surface in parallel with a prefrosted surface. By replacing the overlapping in-plane dry zones with a uniform out-of-plane dry zone, we show that even an uncoated aluminum surface can stay almost completely dry in chilled and supersaturated conditions. Using a blend of experiments and numerical simulations, we show that the critical separation required to keep the surface dry is a function of the ambient supersaturation.
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Metal-based antiperspirants have been in use for centuries; however, there is an increasing consumer demand for a metal-free alternative that works effectively. Here, we develop an artificial sweat duct rig and demonstrate an alternative, metal-free approach to antiperspiration. Instead of clogging sweat ducts with metal salts, we use a hygroscopic material to induce the evaporation of sweat as it approaches the outlet (i.e. pore) of the sweat duct. As a result, the sweat dehydrates almost completely while still being inside of the duct, forming a natural gel-like salt plug that halts the flow. We show that the critical pressure gradient within the duct (â¼3 kPa), beneath which clogging occurs, can be rationalized by balancing the mass flow rates of the liquid (Poiseuille's law) and the evaporative vapor (Fick's law).
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Órganos Artificiales , Sudor/química , Antitranspirantes/química , Antitranspirantes/farmacología , Metales/química , Presión , Sales (Química)/química , Sudoración/efectos de los fármacosRESUMEN
In arid yet foggy regions, fog harvesting is emerging as a promising approach to combat water scarcity. The mesh netting used by current fog harvesters suffers from inefficient drainage, which severely constrains the water collection efficiency. Recently, it was demonstrated that fog harps can significantly enhance water harvesting as the vertical wire array does not obstruct the drainage pathway. However, fabrication limitations resulted in a very low shade coefficient of 18% for the initial fog harp prototype and the field testing was geographically confined to light fog conditions. Here, we use wire-electrical discharge machining (wire-EDM) to machine ultrafine comb arrays; winding the harp wire along a comb-embedded reinforced frame enabled a shade coefficient of 50%. To field test under heavy fog conditions, we placed the harvesters on a closed-circuit test road and inundated them with fog produced by an array of overlying fog towers. On average, the fog harps collected about three times more water than the mesh netting. During fog harvesting, the harp wires were observed to tangle together due to the surface tension of water. We developed a rational model to predict the extent of the tangling problem for any given fog harp design. By designing next-generation fog harps to be anti-tangling, we expect that even larger performance multipliers will be possible compared to the current mesh harvesters.
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Wheat is threatened by diseases such as leaf rust. One significant mechanism of disease spread is the liberation and dispersal of rust spores due to rainsplash. However, it is unclear to what extent the spore-laden splashed droplets can transmit the disease to neighbouring leaves. Here, we show that splashed droplets either bounce or stick, depending on the orientation of the leaf and whether the surface of the leaf has been treated with a fungicide. A scaling model revealed that bouncing was enabled when the droplet's kinetic energy exceeded its pinning energy to the surface. Our findings indicate that, ironically, the application of fungicide to protect a wheat plant may also facilitate pathogen spread and infection by making leaves sticky to spore-laden droplets.
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Basidiomycota , Fungicidas Industriales , Enfermedades de las Plantas , Hojas de la Planta , Esporas Fúngicas , TriticumRESUMEN
Hygroscopic materials are widely used as desiccants for applications including food production, packaging, anti-icing, and gas storage. Current techniques for quantifying the hygroscopicity of materials, such as the use of a tandem differential mobility analyzer or a gravimetric vapor sorption analyzer, require complex and expensive setups. Here, we show that the hygroscopicity of any bulk material can be simply characterized by suspending it above a deposited droplet and measuring the droplet's evaporation rate. By controlling the temperature of the droplet to correspond to the dew point, we ensured that any evaporation was directly correlated with diffusive transport into the low-pressure hygroscopic material. Using Fick's law, the effective water vapor concentration of each material was extracted and nondimensionalized by the saturation concentration to obtain a hygroscopic index. This nondimensional index ranges from 0 (no hygroscopicity) to 1 (null vapor pressure) and can also be conceptualized as 1 - aw, where aw is the material's water activity.
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The transpiration cycle in trees is powered by a negative water potential generated within the leaves, which pumps water up a dense array of xylem conduits. Synthetic trees can mimic this transpiration cycle, but have been confined to pumping water across a single microcapillary or microfluidic channels. Here, we fabricated tall synthetic trees where water ascends up an array of large diameter conduits, to enable transpiration at the same macroscopic scale as natural trees. An array of 19 tubes of millimetric diameter were embedded inside of a nanoporous ceramic disk on one end, while their free end was submerged in a water reservoir. After saturating the synthetic tree by boiling it underwater, water can flow continuously up the tubes even when the ceramic disk was elevated over 3 m above the reservoir. A theory is developed to reveal two distinct modes of transpiration: an evaporation-limited regime and a flow-limited regime.