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      Droplet Impact on the Super-Hydrophobic Surface with Micro-Pillar Arrays Fabricated by Hybrid Laser Ablation and Silanization Process

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          Abstract

          A super-hydrophobic aluminum alloy surface with decorated pillar arrays was obtained by hybrid laser ablation and further silanization process. The as-prepared surface showed a high apparent contact angle of 158.2 ± 2.0° and low sliding angle of 3 ± 1°. Surface morphologies and surface chemistry were explored to obtain insights into the generation process of super-hydrophobicity. The main objective of this current work is to investigate the maximum spreading factor of water droplets impacting on the pillar-patterned super-hydrophobic surface based on the energy conservation concept. Although many previous studies have investigated the droplet impacting behavior on flat solid surfaces, the empirical models were proposed based on a few parameters including the Reynolds number ( Re), Weber number ( We), as well as the Ohnesorge number ( Oh). This resulted in limitations for the super-hydrophobic surfaces due to the ignorance of the geometrical parameters of the pillars and viscous energy dissipation for liquid flow within the pillar arrays. In this paper, the maximum spreading factor was deduced from the perspective of energy balance, and the predicted results were in good agreement with our experimental results with a mean error of 4.99% and standard deviation of 0.10.

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          Most cited references48

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          DROP IMPACT DYNAMICS: Splashing, Spreading, Receding, Bouncing…

          A.L. Yarin (2006)
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            Natural and biomimetic artificial surfaces for superhydrophobicity, self-cleaning, low adhesion, and drag reduction

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              Reducing the contact time of a bouncing drop.

              Surfaces designed so that drops do not adhere to them but instead bounce off have received substantial attention because of their ability to stay dry, self-clean and resist icing. A drop striking a non-wetting surface of this type will spread out to a maximum diameter and then recoil to such an extent that it completely rebounds and leaves the solid material. The amount of time that the drop is in contact with the solid--the 'contact time'--depends on the inertia and capillarity of the drop, internal dissipation and surface-liquid interactions. And because contact time controls the extent to which mass, momentum and energy are exchanged between drop and surface, it is often advantageous to minimize it. The conventional approach has been to minimize surface-liquid interactions that can lead to contact line pinning; but even in the absence of any surface interactions, drop hydrodynamics imposes a minimum contact time that was conventionally assumed to be attained with axisymmetrically spreading and recoiling drops. Here we demonstrate that it is possible to reduce the contact time below this theoretical limit by using superhydrophobic surfaces with a morphology that redistributes the liquid mass and thereby alters the drop hydrodynamics. We show theoretically and experimentally that this approach allows us to reduce the overall contact time between a bouncing drop and a surface below what was previously thought possible.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Materials (Basel)
                Materials (Basel)
                materials
                Materials
                MDPI
                1996-1944
                06 March 2019
                March 2019
                : 12
                : 5
                : 765
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Mechanical Engineering, Tianjin University, Tianjin 300350, China; xia_zhy@ 123456tju.edu.cn (Z.X.); xiaoyuhe@ 123456tju.edu.cn (Y.X.); lali@ 123456tju.edu.cn (L.L.); shbwang@ 123456tju.edu.cn (S.W.)
                [2 ]Key Laboratory of Mechanism Theory and Equipment Design, Ministry of Education, Tianjin University, Tianjin 300350, China
                [3 ]School of Engineering, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK; X.Liu@ 123456warwick.ac.uk
                Author notes
                Article
                materials-12-00765
                10.3390/ma12050765
                6427656
                30845671
                2bc90ecd-3c22-48a9-a149-eaa16cac4b5d
                © 2019 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 17 February 2019
                : 04 March 2019
                Categories
                Article

                nanosecond laser,super-hydrophobic,droplet impacting,maximum spreading factor,viscous dissipation

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