Abstract Self‐propulsion of highly wetting liquids is important in heat exchanger, air conditioning, and refrigeration systems. However, it is challenging to achieve such a spontaneous motion as these liquids tend to wet all the surfaces due to their ultralow surface tensions. Despite that extensive asymmetric surface structures and gradient chemical coatings are developed for directional droplet transport, they will be flooded and covered by these liquids. Here, this challenge is addressed by creating a gradient quasi‐liquid surface to achieve the self‐propulsion of droplets with surface tensions down to 10.0 mN m−1. Such a surface engineered by tethering flexible polymers with gradient grafting density shows ultralow contact angle hysteresis (<1o) to highly wetting liquids. Thus, the surface can simultaneously provide sufficient driving forces through the gradient wettability and negligible retention forces through the slippery boundary lubrication for spontaneous droplet movement. Moreover, continual self‐propulsion of tiny droplets is achieved by spraying highly wetting liquids in simulated condensation conditions and demonstrates that adding temperature gradient can further accelerate the self‐propulsion. The study provides a new paradigm to promote passive removal of highly wetting droplets, leading to potential impacts in enhancing condensation heat transfer regardless of surface orientations.
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Gradient-induced droplet motion over soft solids
Abstract Fluid droplets can be induced to move over rigid or flexible surfaces under external or body forces. We describe the effect of variations in material properties of a flexible substrate as a mechanism for motion. In this paper, we consider a droplet placed on a substrate with either a stiffness or surface energy gradient and consider its potential for motion via coupling to elastic deformations of the substrate. In order to clarify the role of contact angles and to obtain a tractable model, we consider a 2D droplet. The gradients in substrate material properties give rise to asymmetric solid deformation and to unequal contact angles, thereby producing a force on the droplet. We then use a dynamic viscoelastic model to predict the resulting dynamics of droplets. Numerical results quantifying the effect of the gradients establish that it is more feasible to induce droplet motion with a gradient in surface energy. The results show that the magnitude of elastic modulus gradient needed to induce droplet motion exceeds experimentally feasible limits in the production of soft solids and is therefore unlikely as a passive mechanism for cell motion. In both cases, of surface energy or elastic modulus, the threshold to initiate motion is achieved at lower mean values of the material properties.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1812445
- PAR ID:
- 10149499
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics
- ISSN:
- 0272-4960
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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