RESUMO
Liquid manipulation is essential for daily life and modern industry, and it is widely used in various fields, including seawater desalination, microfluidic robots, and biomedical engineering. Nevertheless, the current research focuses on the manipulation of individual droplets. There are a few projects for water film management. Here, we proposed a facile method of wind-triggered water film self-sculpturing based on a heterogeneous wettability surface, which is achieved by the femtosecond laser direct writing technology and femtosecond laser deposition. Under the conditions of various airflow velocities and water film thicknesses, three distinct behaviors of the water film were analyzed. As a result, when the water film thickness is lower than 4.9 mm, the self-sculpture process will occur until the whole superhydrophobic surface dewetting. Four potential applications are demonstrated, including encryption, oil containers, reconfigurable patterning, and self-splitting devices. This work provides a new approach for manipulating a water film of fluid control engineering.
RESUMO
Flexible multifunctional composite films in which opposing surfaces have two or more distinct physical properties are highly applicable for wearable electronic devices, electrical power systems and biomedical engineering. However, fabrication of such "Janus" films can be time consuming, complex or economically not feasible. In this work, Janus polyimide (PI) films were prepared by femtosecond laser direct writing technology, which generated a honeycomb porous structure (HPS) on one side and a lawn-like structure (LLS) on the other. Deposition of silver nanowires (AGNWs) by drop coating on the LLS side (AGNWs@LLS) resulted in a film in which each face possessed highly distinct triple properties. The HPS side was superhydrophobic with a water contact angle (WCA) of â¼153.3° and electrically non-conductive, while the AGNWs@LLS side was superhydrophilic (WCA â¼7.8°) and highly conductive (â¼3.8 Ω). Moreover, the AGNWs@LLS face showed ultra-low thermal radiation performance, almost reaching saturation. On a heating table at â¼100 °C, the temperature of the AGNWs@LLS side remained at â¼44.5 °C, while the HPS side exhibited a temperature of â¼93.9 °C. This "triple Janus film" and lasing techniques developed might be useful for designing new materials for the integration and miniaturization of multifunctional electronic equipment.