Field-Induced Wettability Gradients for No-Loss Transport of Oil Droplets on Slippery Surfaces
Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews (RGC: 21, 22, 62) › 21_Publication in refereed journal › peer-review
Author(s)
Detail(s)
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 38723-38729 |
Journal / Publication | ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces |
Volume | 12 |
Issue number | 34 |
Online published | 28 Jul 2020 |
Publication status | Published - 26 Aug 2020 |
Externally published | Yes |
Link(s)
Abstract
Transporting oil droplets is crucial for a wide range of industrial and biomedical applications but remains highly challenging due to the large contact angle hysteresis on most solid surfaces. A liquid-infused slippery surface has a low hysteresis contact angle and is a highly promising platform if sufficient wettability gradient can be created. Current strategies used to create wettability gradient typically rely on the engineering of the chemical composition or geometrical structure. However, these strategies are inefficient on a slippery surface because the infused liquid tends to conceal the gradient in the chemical composition and small-scale geometrical structure. Magnifying the structure, on the other hand, will significantly distort the surface topography, which is unwanted in practice. In this study, we address this challenge by introducing a field-induced wettability gradient on a flat slippery surface. By printing radial electrodes array, we can pattern the electric field, which induces gradient contact angles. Theoretical analysis and experimental results reveal that the droplet transport behavior can be captured by a nondimensional electric Bond number. Our surface enables no-loss transport of various types of droplets, which we expect to find important applications such as heat transfer, anticontamination, microfluidics, and biochemical analysis.
Research Area(s)
- electric field, microfluidics, no-loss liquid transport, slippery surface, wettability gradient
Citation Format(s)
Field-Induced Wettability Gradients for No-Loss Transport of Oil Droplets on Slippery Surfaces. / Tang, Biao; Meng, Chuanzhi; Zhuang, Lei et al.
In: ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, Vol. 12, No. 34, 26.08.2020, p. 38723-38729.Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews (RGC: 21, 22, 62) › 21_Publication in refereed journal › peer-review