화학공학소재연구정보센터
Langmuir, Vol.36, No.32, 9510-9522, 2020
Breaking Droplet Jumping Energy Conversion Limits with Superhydrophobic Microgrooves
Coalescence-induced droplet jumping has the potential to enhance the performance of a variety of applications including condensation heat transfer, surface self-cleaning, anti-icing, and defrosting to name a few. Her; we study droplet jumping on hierarchical microgrooved and nanostructured smooth superhydrophobic surfaces. We show that the confined microgroove structures play a key role in tailoring droplet coalescence hydrodynamics, which in turn affects the droplet jumping velocity and energy conversion efficiency. We observed self-jumping of individual deformed droplets within microgrooves having maximum surface-to-kinetic energy conversion efficiency of 8%. Furthermore, various coalescence-induced jumping modes were observed on the hierarchical microgrooved superhydrophobic surface. The microgroove structure enabled high droplet jumping velocity (approximate to 0.740 and energy conversion efficiency (approximate to 46%) by enabling the coalescence of deformed droplets in microgrooves with undeformed droplets on adjacent plateaus. The jumping velocity and energy conversion efficiency enhancements are 1.93x and 6.67x higher than traditional coalescence-induced droplet jumping on smooth superhydrophobic surfaces. This work not only demonstrates high droplet jumping velocity and energy conversion efficiency but also demonstrates the key role played by macroscale structures on coalescence hydrodynamics and elucidates a method to further control droplet jumping physics for a plethora of applications.