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Zipping effect on omniphobic surfaces for controlled deposition of minute amounts of fluid or colloids
Authors:Dufour Renaud  Brunet Philippe  Harnois Maxime  Boukherroub Rabah  Thomy Vincent  Senez Vincent
Affiliation:University Lille Nord de France, Villeneuve d'Ascq, Institute of Electronics, Microelectronics and Nanotechnology, UMR CNRS 8520, Villeneuve d'Ascq, France.
Abstract:When a drop sits on a highly liquid-repellent surface (super-hydrophobic or super-omniphobic) made of periodic micrometer-sized posts, its contact-line can recede with very weak mechanical retention providing that the liquid stays on top of the microsized posts. Occurring in both sliding and evaporation processes, the achievement of low-contact-angle hysteresis (low retention) is required for discrete microfluidic applications involving liquid motion or self-cleaning; however, careful examination shows that during receding, a minute amount of liquid is left on top of the posts lying at the receding edge of the drop. For the first time, the heterogeneities of these deposits along the drop-receding contact-line are underlined. Both nonvolatile liquid and particle-laden water are used to quantitatively characterize what rules the volume distribution of deposited liquid. The experiments suggest that the dynamics of the liquid de-pinning cascade is likely to select the volume left on a specific post, involving the pinch-off and detachment of a liquid bridge. In an applied prospective, this phenomenon dismisses such surfaces for self-cleaning purposes, but offers an original way to deposit controlled amounts of liquid and (bio)-particles at well-targeted locations.
Keywords:capillary bridge  super‐hydrophobicity  super‐omniphobicity  colloids  zipping effect
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