Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 4 de 4
Filtrar
Más filtros










Base de datos
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(22): 26225-26237, 2022 Jun 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35611942

RESUMEN

Often inspired by nature, techniques for precise droplet manipulation have found applications in microfluidics, microreactors, and water harvesting. However, a widely applicable strategy for surface modification combining simultaneous hydrophobicity and pH-sensitivity has not yet been achieved by employing environmentally friendly assembly conditions. The introduction of pH-responsive groups to an otherwise fluorinated polyphosphazene (PPZ) unlocks pH-selective droplet capture and transfer. Here, an all-aqueous layer-by-layer (LbL) deposition of polyelectrolytes is used to create unique hydrophobic coatings, endowing surfaces with the ability to sense environmental pH. The high hydrophobicity of these coatings (ultimately reaching a contact angle >120° on flat surfaces) is enabled by the formation of hydrophobic nanoscale domains and controllable by the degree of fluorination of PPZs, polyamine-binding partners, deposition pH, and coating thickness. Inspired by the hierarchical structure of rose petals, these versatile coatings reach a contact angle >150° when deposited on structured surfaces while introducing a tunable adhesivity that enables precise droplet manipulation. The films exhibited a strongly pronounced parahydrophobic rose petal behavior characterized through the contact angle hysteresis. Depositing as few as five bilayers (∼25 nm) on microstructured rather than smooth substrates resulted in superhydrophobicity with water contact angles >150° and the attenuation of the contact angle hysteresis, enabling highly controlled transfer of aqueous droplets. The pH-selective droplet transfer was achieved between surfaces with either the same microstructure and LbL film building blocks, which were assembled at different pH, or between surfaces with different microstructures coated with identical films. The demonstrated capability of these hydrophobic LbL films to endow surfaces with controlled hydrophobicity through adsorption from aqueous solutions and control the adhesion and transfer of water droplets between surfaces can be used in droplet-based microfluidics applications and water collection/harvesting.

2.
Soft Matter ; 17(13): 3603-3608, 2021 Apr 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33416826

RESUMEN

For organic semiconductor crystals exhibiting anisotropic charge transport along different crystallographic directions, nanoconfinement is a powerful strategy to control crystal orientation by aligning the fast crystallographic growth direction(s) with the unconfined axis(es) of nanoconfining scaffolds. Here, design rules are presented to relate crystal morphology, scaffold geometry, and orientation control in solution-processed small-molecule crystals. Specifically, organic semiconductor triisopropylsilylethynyl pyranthrene needle-like crystals with a dimensionality of n = 1 and perylene platelike crystals with n = 2 were grown from solution within nanoconfining scaffolds comprising cylindrical nanopores with a dimensionality of m = 1, representing one unconfined dimension along the cylinder axis, and those comprising nanopillar arrays with a dimensionality of m = 2. For m = n systems, native crystal growth habits were preserved while the crystal orientation in n = m direction(s) was dictated by the geometry of the scaffold. For n≠m systems, on the other hand, orientation control was restricted within a single plane, either parallel or perpendicular to the substrate surface. Intriguingly, control over crystal shape was also observed for perylene crystals grown in cylindrical nanopores (n > m). Within the nanopores, crystal growth was restricted along a single direction to form a needle-like morphology. Once growth proceeded above the scaffold surface, the crystals adopted their native growth habit to form asymmetric T-shaped single crystals with concave corners. These findings suggest that nanoporous scaffolds with spatially-varying dimensionalities can be used to grow single crystals of complex shapes.

3.
Langmuir ; 36(38): 11245-11254, 2020 Sep 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32902998

RESUMEN

Although freezing of a droplet on cold surfaces is a universal phenomenon, its mechanisms are still inadequately understood, especially on the surfaces of which the temperature is lower than -60 °C. Here, we report the unique spontaneous deicing phenomena of a water droplet impacting on cold surfaces with a temperature as low as -120 °C. As a hydrophilic surface is cooled below a critically low temperature (e.g., -57 °C for a silicon surface with a native oxide), the impacting water droplet spontaneously delaminates from the substrate and freezes radially outward in a horizontal plane, as opposed to the typical upward freezing shown on a warmer surface. The self-delamination phenomenon is suppressed or reinstated by the combination of thermal and hydrophobic modifications of the surface, which can be taken advantage of for effective deicing schemes for icephobic surface applications.

4.
Langmuir ; 36(10): 2622-2628, 2020 Mar 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32133857

RESUMEN

Advances made in fabrication of patterned surfaces with well-defined dimensions of topographic features and their lateral dissemination drive the progress in interpretation of liquid spreading, adhesion, and retreat on engineered solid surfaces. Despite extensive studies on liquid droplet spreading and adhesion on textured surfaces in recent years, conformation of the three-phase contact line and its effect on macroscopic contact angle and droplet adhesion remain the focus of intensive debate. Here, we investigate the effect of surface topography on the adhesion force of Cassie-Baxter-state droplets on concentric ring-textured hydrophobic surfaces having rings with lateral dimensions of 5, 10, and 45 µm and separated by 5, 6, and 7 µm trenches, respectively, with fixed depth of 15 µm. Unlike mostly tested surfaces textured with straight ridges, pores, and pillars, where the droplet base contact line is anisotropic and its conformation varies along the apparent boundary, concentric rings are symmetrical and reinforce the microscopic contact line to align to a circular one that reflects the shape of the pattern. In this study, adhesion forces were calculated based on surface tension and Laplace pressure forces and were compared with the experimental forces for both water and ethylene glycol droplets having a varying contact diameter on the concentric ring-pattern at the point of maximum adhesion force. Results show that the microscopic contact line of the liquid retains its circular shape controlled by circular rings of the pattern, irrespectively of the droplet base diameter larger than 0.8 mm, and there is a good agreement between the experimental and calculated adhesion forces.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA
...