| Literature DB >> 35275638 |
Jingcheng Ma1, Zhuoyuan Zheng2, Muhammad Jahidul Hoque1, Longnan Li1, Kazi Fazle Rabbi1, Jin Yao Ho3, Paul V Braun1,4,5, Pingfeng Wang2, Nenad Miljkovic1,5,6,7.
Abstract
Creating thin (<100 nm) hydrophobic coatings that are durable in wet conditions remains challenging. Although the dropwise condensation of steam on thin hydrophobic coatings can enhance condensation heat transfer by 1000%, these coatings easily delaminate. Designing interfaces with high adhesion while maintaining a nanoscale coating thickness is key to overcoming this challenge. In nature, cell membranes face this same challenge where nanometer-thick lipid bilayers achieve high adhesion in wet environments to maintain integrity. Nature ensures this adhesion by forming a lipid interface having two nonpolar surfaces, demonstrating high physicochemical resistance to biofluids attempting to open the interface. Here, developing an artificial lipid-like interface that utilizes fluorine-carbon molecular chains can achieve durable nanometric hydrophobic coatings. The application of our approach to create a superhydrophobic material shows high stability during jumping-droplet-enhanced condensation as quantified from a continual one-year steam condensation experiment. The jumping-droplet condensation enhanced condensation heat transfer coefficient up to 400% on tube samples when compared to filmwise condensation on bare copper. Our bioinspired materials design principle can be followed to develop many durable hydrophobic surfaces using alternate substrate-coating pairs, providing stable hydrophobicity or superhydrophobicity to a plethora of applications.Entities:
Keywords: bioinspiration; condensation; droplet; durability; hydrophobic; nature-inspired
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35275638 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c10250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881