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1.
Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces ; 236: 113832, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38447447

ABSTRACT

The petal effect is identified as a non-wetting state with high drop adhesion. The wetting behavior of petal surfaces is attributed to the papillose structure of their epidermis, which leads to a Cassie-Baxter regime combined with strong pinning sites. Under this scenario, sessile drops are pearl shaped and, unlike lotus-like surfaces, firmly attached to the surface. Petal surfaces are used as inspiration for the fabrication of functional parahydrophobic surfaces such as antibacterial or water-harvesting surfaces. In this work, two types of rose petals were replicated by using a templating technique based in Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) nanocasting. The topographic structure, the condensation mechanism under saturated environments and the wetting properties of the natural rose petal and their negative and positive replicas were analyzed. Finally, we performed prospective ice adhesion studies to elucidate whether petal-like surfaces may be used as deicing solutions.


Subject(s)
Fabaceae , Rosa , Surface Properties , Rosa/chemistry , Prospective Studies , Wettability
2.
Langmuir ; 39(15): 5469-5476, 2023 Apr 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37016494

ABSTRACT

Galvanized steel surfaces are widely used in industry as a solution to prevent corrosion of steel tools that operate in outdoor or corrosive and oxidative environments. These objects are coated with a zinc protective layer deposited by hot dip galvanization. Turning the surface of galvanized steel tools into superhydrophobic may lead to very useful functionalities, although it may be a difficult task, because the preservation of the thin zinc layer is a claim. We propose herein the use of a bottom-up approach based on sandblasting, followed by sintering of zinc nanoparticles on the galvanized steel substrate, which allowed us to produce a zinc-made hierarchical structure required for superhydrophobicity. These samples acquired a double-scale structure that led to superhydrophobicity when they were later hydrophobized with a thin fluoropolymer layer. We found that sandblasting might be useful but not mandatory, unlike the sintering process, which was essential to reach superhydrophobicity. We found that, under certain experimental conditions, the surfaces showed outstanding water-repellent properties. We observed that the sandblasting on galvanized steel caused more damage than the sintering process. Sintering of low-melting-point metal nanoparticles was revealed as a promising strategy to fabricate functional metallic surfaces.

3.
ACS Omega ; 7(24): 20741-20749, 2022 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35755365

ABSTRACT

Elastomeric surfaces and oil-infused elastic surfaces reveal low ice adhesion, in part because of their deformability. However, these soft surfaces might jeopardize their mechanical durability. In this work, we analyzed the mechanical durability of elastic polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) surfaces with different balances between elasticity and deicing performances. The durability was studied in terms of shear/tensile ice adhesion strength before and after different wear tests. These tests consisted of abrasion/erosion cycles using standard procedures aimed to reproduce different environmental wearing agents. The main objective is to evaluate if our PDMS surfaces can become long-lasting solutions for ice removal in real conditions. We found that our elastic surfaces show excellent durability. After the wear tests, the ice adhesion strength values remained low or even unaltered. Although the oil-infused PDMS surface was the softest one, it presented considerable durability and excellent low ice adhesion, being a promising solution.

4.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 608(Pt 1): 792-799, 2022 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34689111

ABSTRACT

HYPOTHESIS: Ice adhesion to rigid materials is reduced with low energy surfaces of high receding contact angles. However, their adhesion strength values are above the threshold value to be considered as icephobic materials. Surface deformability is a promising route to further reduce ice adhesion. EXPERIMENTS: In this work, we prepared elastomer surfaces with a wide range of elastic moduli and hydrophobicity degree and we measured their ice adhesion strength. Moreover, we also explored the deicing performance of oil-infused elastomeric surfaces. The ice adhesion was characterized by two detachment modes: tensile and shear. FINDINGS: The variety of elastomeric surfaces allowed us to simultaneously analyze the ice adhesion dependence with deformability and contact angle hysteresis. We found that the impact of these properties depends on the detachment mode, being deformability more important in shear mode and hydrophobicity more relevant in tensile mode. In addition, oil infusion further reduces ice adhesion due to the interfacial slippage. From an optimal balance between deformability and hydrophobicity, we were able to identify surfaces with super-low ice adhesion.


Subject(s)
Ice , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Physical Phenomena , Surface Properties
5.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 589: 166-172, 2021 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33460848

ABSTRACT

HYPOTHESIS: Characterization of contact angle hysteresis on soft surfaces is sensitive to the measurement protocol and might present adventitious time-dependencies. Contact line dynamics on solid surfaces is altered by the surface chemistry, surface roughness and/or surface elasticity. We observed a "slow" spontaneous relaxation of static water sessile drops placed on elastic surfaces. This unexpected drop motion reveals unresolved equilibrium configurations that may affect the observed values of contact angle hysteresis. Drop relaxation on deformable surfaces is partially governed by a viscoelastic dissipation located at the contact line. EXPERIMENTS: In this work, we studied the natural relaxation of water drops formed on several smooth PDMS surfaces with different elastic moduli. We monitored in time the contact angle and contact radius of each drop. For varying the initial contact angle, we used the growing-shrinking drop method. FINDINGS: We postulate that the so-called "braking effect", produced by the surface deformability, affects the contact line velocity and in consequence, the contact angle measurements. We conclude that the wetting properties of elastic surfaces should be properly examined with reliable values of contact angle measured after drop relaxation.

6.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(31): 35572-35578, 2020 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32639144

ABSTRACT

Despite the remarkable advances in mitigating ice formation and accretion, however, no engineered anti-icing surfaces today can durably prevent frost formation, droplet freezing, and ice accretion in an economical and ecofriendly way. Herein, sustainable and low-cost electrolyte hydrogel (EH) surfaces are developed by infusing salted water into a hydrogel matrix for avoiding icing. The EH surfaces can both prevent ice/frost formation for an extremely long time and reduce ice adhesion strength to ultralow value (Pa-level) at a tunable temperature window down to -48.4 °C. Furthermore, ice can self-remove from the tilted EH surface within 10 s at -10 °C by self-gravity. As demonstrated by both molecular dynamic simulations and experiments, these extreme performances are attributed to the diffusion of ions to the interface between EH and ice. The sustainable anti-icing properties of EH can be maintained by replenishing in real-time with available ion sources, indicating the promising applications in offshore platforms and ships.

7.
J Vis Exp ; (138)2018 08 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30175989

ABSTRACT

Several ways to produce superhydrophobic metal surfaces are presented in this work. Aluminum was chosen as the metal substrate due to its wide use in industry. The wettability of the produced surface was analyzed by bouncing drop experiments and the topography was analyzed by confocal microscopy. In addition, we show various methodologies to measure its durability and anti-icing properties. Superhydrophobic surfaces hold a special texture that must be preserved to keep their water-repellency. To fabricate durable surfaces, we followed two strategies to incorporate a resistant texture. The first strategy is a direct incorporation of roughness to the metal substrate by acid etching. After this surface texturization, the surface energy was decreased by silanization or fluoropolymer deposition. The second strategy is the growth of a ceria layer (after surface texturization) that should enhance the surface hardness and corrosion resistance. The surface energy was decreased with a stearic acid film. The durability of the superhydrophobic surfaces was examined by a particle impact test, mechanical wear by lateral abrasion, and UV-ozone resistance. The anti-icing properties were explored by studying the ability to repeal subcooled water, freezing delay, and ice adhesion.


Subject(s)
Surface Properties , Freezing , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions
8.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 508: 129-136, 2017 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28822862

ABSTRACT

The analysis of wetting properties of superhydrophobic surfaces may be a difficult task due to the restless behavior of drops on this type of surfaces and the limitations of goniometry for high contact angles. A method to validate the performance of superhydrophobic surfaces, rather than standard goniometry, is required. In this work, we used bouncing drop dynamics as a useful tool to predict the water repellency of different superhydrophobic surfaces. From bouncing drop experiments conducted over a wide range of superhydrophobic surfaces, we found that those surfaces with a proper roughness degree and homogeneous chemical composition showed higher water-repellency. We also conducted a drop condensation study at saturating conditions aimed to determine whether there is direct correlation between water repellency and condensation delay. We found that the drop condensation process is strongly related to the surface topography, as well as the intrinsic wettability. The condensation is promoted on rough surfaces but it is delayed on intrinsically hydrophobic surfaces. However, the differences found in condensation delay between the superhydrophobic surfaces explored in this study cannot be justified by their chemical homogeneity nor their efficiency as water repellent surfaces, separately.

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