| Literature DB >> 35268876 |
Bekir Sami Yilbas1,2,3,4, Abba Abubakar1, Mubarak Yakubu1, Hussain Al-Qahtani1,2, Abdullah Al-Sharafi1,2,3.
Abstract
Water droplet impact on nanowires/nanowalls' textured hydrophobic silicon surfaces was examined by assessing the influence of texture on the droplet impact dynamics. Silicon wafer surfaces were treated, resulting in closely packed nanowire/nanowall textures with an average spacing and height of 130 nm and 10.45 μm, respectively. The top surfaces of the nanowires/nanowalls were hydrophobized through the deposition of functionalized silica nanoparticles, resulting in a droplet contact angle of 158° ± 2° with a hysteresis of 4° ± 1°. A high-speed camera was utilized to monitor the impacting droplets on hydrophobized nanowires/nanowalls' textured surfaces. The nanowires/nanowalls texturing of the surface enhances the pinning of the droplet on the impacted surface and lowers the droplet spreading. The maximum spreading diameter of the impacting droplet on the hydrophobized nanowires/nanowalls surfaces becomes smaller than that of the hydrophobized as-received silicon, hydrophobized graphite, micro-grooved, and nano-springs surfaces. Penetration of the impacted droplet fluid into the nanowall-cell structures increases trapped air pressure in the cells, acting as an air cushion at the interface of the droplet fluid and nanowalls' top surface. This lowers the droplet pinning and reduces the work of droplet volume deformation while enhancing the droplet rebound height.Entities:
Keywords: droplet impact; hydrophobic nanocells; nanowalls; silicon wafer
Year: 2022 PMID: 35268876 PMCID: PMC8911166 DOI: 10.3390/ma15051645
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1SEM images of top surfaces of nanowires/nanowalls: (a) combination of nanowires and nanowalls (nanowires are marked in circle); (b) nanowalls have porous-like texture on the top surface.
Figure 2Three-dimensional AFM image of the etched silicon-wafer surface and line scan: (a) image of the etched surface and (b) line scan of the etched surface.
Figure 3SEM microimages of side and top views of nanowalls: (a) nanowall side view showing height of nanowalls and (b) close top view of silica-particles-deposited nanowall surface.
Figure 4Goniometer images of a water droplet on the etched and hydrophobized etched silicon wafer.
Figure 5High-speed camera images of impacting droplet at different transitions on the impacted surface for (a) hydrophobized etched and (b) hydrophobized as-received silicon wafer. The droplet impact height is 20 mm.
Figure 6(a) Normalized spreading diameter variation with normalized time for 20 mm height and 10–30 µL droplet volumes. (b) Normalized spreading diameter variation with normalized time for 20 µL and 10–30 mm impact heights. (c) Spread factor variation with Weber number for 20 mm height and 10–30 µL droplet volumes.
Figure 7Comparison of spreading factor with Weber number for different surface types. □ Si nanosprings Adapted from Ref. [46]; ○ Si micropost array surface Adapted from Ref. [47]; ◊ Graphite Adapted from Ref. [48]; | Si microgrooved Surface Adapted from Ref. [13].
Figure 8Restitution coefficient with Weber number for f: (a) 10 µL, (b) 20 µL, and (c) 30 µL droplets impacting on hydrophobized as-received silicon and hydrophobized etched silicon wafers.
Figure 9Rebound heights with normalized time for 20 µL volume droplet impacting on hydrophobized as-received silicon and hydrophobized etched silicon wafers from initial heights of (a) 10 mm, (b) 20 mm, and (c) 30 mm.