skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Hydrophilic reentrant SLIPS enabled flow separation for rapid water harvesting
Water harvesting from air is desired for decentralized water supply wherever water is needed. When water vapor is condensed as droplets on a surface the unremoved droplets act as thermal barriers. A surface that can provide continual droplet-free areas for nucleation is favorable for condensation water harvesting. Here, we report a flow-separation condensation mode on a hydrophilic reentrant slippery liquid-infused porous surface (SLIPS) that rapidly removes droplets with diameters above 50 μm. The slippery reentrant channels lock the liquid columns inside and transport them to the end of each channel. We demonstrate that the liquid columns can harvest the droplets on top of the hydrophilic reentrant SLIPS at a high droplet removal frequency of 130 Hz/mm 2 . The sustainable flow separation without flooding increases the water harvesting rate by 110% compared to the state-of-the-art hydrophilic flat SLIPS. Such a flow-separation condensation approach paves a way for water harvesting.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2044348 2018188
PAR ID:
10406422
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume:
119
Issue:
36
ISSN:
0027-8424
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract Frosting occurs due to the freezing of condensed water droplets on a supercooled surface. The nucleated frost propagates through interdroplet bridges and covers the entire surface, resulting from the deposition of highly supersaturated vapor surrounding tiny droplets. While inhibition of the formation of frost bridges is not possible, the propagation of frost can be delayed by effectively removing tiny droplets. Passive technologies, such as superhydrophobic surfaces (SHS) and hydrophobic slippery liquid‐infused porous surfaces (SLIPS), rely on static growth and direct contact with densely distributed droplets. However, use of these approaches in delaying frost propagation involves challenges, as the interdroplet distance remains small. Here, we report a new approach of spontaneous droplet movement on hydrophilic SLIPS to delay the formation of interdroplet frost bridges. Surface tension forces generated by the hydrophilic oil meniscus of a large water droplet efficiently pull neighboring droplets with a diameter of less than 20 μm from all directions. This causes a dynamic separation between water droplets and an adjacent frozen droplet. Such a process delays the formation and propagation of interdroplet frost bridges. Consequently, there is significant delay in frosting on hydrophilic SLIPS compared to those on SHS and hydrophobic SLIPS. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract Massive studies concern the development of low‐carbon water and energy systems. Specifically, surfaces with special wettability to promote vapor‐to‐liquid condensation have been widely studied, but current solutions suffer from poor heat transfer performances due to inefficient droplet removal. In this study, the limit of condensation on a beetle‐inspired biphilic quasi‐liquid surface (QLS) in a steam environment is pushed, which provides a heat flux 100 times higher than that in atmospheric condensation. Unlike the beetle‐inspired surfaces that have sticky hydrophilic domains, the biphilic QLS consists of PEGylated and siloxane polymers as hydrophilic and hydrophobic quasi‐liquid patterns with the contact angle hysteresis of 3° and 1°, respectively. More importantly, each hydrophilic slippery pattern behaves like a slippery bridge that accelerates droplet coalescence and removal. As a result, the condensed droplets grow rapidly and shed off. It is demonstrated that the biphilic‐striped QLS shows a 60% higher water harvesting rate in atmospheric condensation and a 170% higher heat transfer coefficient in steam condensation than the conventional beetle‐inspired surface. This study provides a new paradigm to push the limit of condensation heat transfer at a high heat flux, which sheds light on the next‐generation surface design for water and energy sustainability. 
    more » « less
  3. Abstract Achieving mobile liquid droplets on solid surfaces is crucial for various practical applications, such as self‐cleaning and anti‐fouling coatings. The last two decades have witnessed remarkable progress in designing functional surfaces, including super‐repellent surfaces and lubricant‐infused surfaces, which allow droplets to roll/slide on the surfaces. However, it remains a challenge to enable droplet motion on hydrophilic solid surfaces. In this work, we demonstrate mobile droplets containing ionic surfactants on smooth hydrophilic surfaces that are charged similarly to surfactant molecules. The ionic surfactant‐laden droplets display ultra‐low contact angle and ultra‐low sliding angle simultaneously on the hydrophilic surfaces. The sliding of the droplet is enabled by the adsorbed surfactant ahead of three‐phase contact line, which is regulated by the electrostatic interaction between ionic surfactant and charged solid surface. The droplet can maintain its motion even when the hydrophilic surface has defects. Furthermore, we demonstrate controlled manipulation of ionic surfactant‐laden droplets on hydrophilic surfaces with different patterns. We envision that our simple technique for achieving mobile droplets on hydrophilic surfaces can pave the way to novel slippery surfaces for different applications. 
    more » « less
  4. 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. 
    more » « less
  5. Atmospheric condensation is very important for multiple practical applications such as heat transfer, thermal management, aerospace, and condensate harvesting. Water droplets heterogeneously nucleate on the surfaces when the temperature is below the dew point temperature. The nucleation energy barrier for a condensed droplet varies significantly with the humidity content in the operating environment. The freezing of this condensate is also dependent on the operating conditions and surface properties. This article presents an experimental study of condensation and freezing from humid air with the objective of understanding how the surface morphology and chemistry determines the droplet shape and wetting state. Hexagonal close-packed arrays of titanium (Ti) pillars are patterned using microsphere photolithography (MPL). The Ti nanostructured surface was tested with and without a Teflon© coating to reveal the condensate harvesting, passive freezing, and dropwise condensation applications, respectively. Condensation and freezing tests were conducted in the presence of non-condensable gases (air) with different relative humidity (RH) levels to control the nucleation site density. The experiments showed that droplet growth occurs in the following stages: initial nucleation, direct growth, and coalescence events. By pinning droplets, coalescence is suppressed for the Ti nanopillared surface altering the size distribution of droplets and significantly accelerating the freezing process. 
    more » « less