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1.
Opt Express ; 27(25): 36066-36074, 2019 Dec 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31873393

RESUMEN

A wicking Nylon 6 polymer material was produced through surface structuring by a direct femtosecond laser nano/microstructuring approach. The produced wicking structure is an array of parallel microgrooves, the surface of which is textured with irregular nanostructures and fine microstructures. High-speed imaging of water spreading vertically uphill against the gravity discloses a series of capillary flow regimes with h ∝ t, h ∝ t1/2, and h ∝ t1/3 scaling laws, where h is the height of capillary rise and t is the time. In the initial stage, the capillary flow occurs with a single front, from which at a certain time a precursor front forms and advances ahead of the main one. Our study shows that the onset of the precursor front occurs in h ∝ t flow regime. The created material exhibits excellent wicking properties and may find applications in various technologically important areas.

2.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 11(4)2021 Apr 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33915883

RESUMEN

A superwicking Ti-6Al-4V alloy material with a hierarchical capillary surface structure was fabricated using femtosecond laser. The basic capillary surface structure is an array of micropillars/microholes. For enhancing its capillary action, the surface of the micropillars/microholes is additionally structured by regular fine microgrooves using a technique of laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS), providing an extremely strong capillary action in a temperature range between 23 °C and 80 °C. Due to strong capillary action, a water drop quickly spreads in the wicking surface structure and forms a thin film over a large surface area, resulting in fast evaporation. The maximum water flow velocity after the acceleration stage is found to be 225-250 mm/s. In contrast to other metallic materials with surface capillarity produced by laser processing, the wicking performance of which quickly degrades with time, the wicking functionality of the material created here is long-lasting. Strong and long-lasting wicking properties make the created material suitable for a large variety of practical applications based on liquid-vapor phase change. Potential significant energy savings in air-conditioning and cooling data centers due to application of the material created here can contribute to mitigation of global warming.

3.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 11(11)2021 Nov 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34835727

RESUMEN

An advanced superwicking aluminum material based on a microgroove surface structure textured with both laser-induced periodic surface structures and fine microholes was produced by direct femtosecond laser nano/microstructuring technology. The created material demonstrates excellent wicking performance in a temperature range of 23 to 120 °C. The experiments on wicking dynamics show a record-high velocity of water spreading that achieves about 450 mm/s at 23 °C and 320 mm/s at 120 °C when the spreading water undergoes intensive boiling. The lifetime of classic Washburn capillary flow dynamics shortens as the temperature increases up to 80 °C. The effects of evaporation and boiling on water spreading become significant above 80 °C, resulting in vanishing of Washburn's dynamics. Both the inertial and visco-inertial flow regimes are insignificantly affected by evaporation at temperatures below the boiling point of water. The boiling effect on the inertial regime is small at 120 °C; however, its effect on the visco-inertial regime is essential. The created material with effective wicking performance under water boiling conditions can find applications in Maisotsenko cycle (M-cycle) high-temperature heat/mass exchangers for enhancing power generation efficiency that is an important factor in reducing CO2 emissions and mitigation of the global climate change.

4.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 10(4)2020 Apr 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32326234

RESUMEN

Capillary flow of water in an array of open nanotextured microgrooves fabricated by femtosecond laser processing of silicon is studied as a function of temperature using high-speed video recording. In a temperature range of 23-80 °C, the produced wicking material provides extremely fast liquid flow with a maximum velocity of 37 cm/s in the initial spreading stage prior to visco-inertial regime. The capillary performance of the material enhances with increasing temperature in the inertial, visco-inertial, and partially in Washburn flow regimes. The classic universal Washburn's regime is observed at all studied temperatures, giving the evidence of its universality at high temperatures as well. The obtained results are of great significance for creating capillary materials for applications in cooling of electronics, energy harvesting, enhancing the critical heat flux of industrial boilers, and Maisotsenko cycle technologies.

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