4.8 Article

Multifunctional ferrofluid-infused surfaces with reconfigurable multiscale topography

Journal

NATURE
Volume 559, Issue 7712, Pages 77-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0250-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DOE [DE-SC0005247]
  2. NSF [DMREF-1533985, ECS-0335765]
  3. Humboldt foundation
  4. European Commission through the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) project DynaSLIPS [626954]
  5. Max Planck Society

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Developing adaptive materials with geometries that change in response to external stimuli provides fundamental insights into the links between the physical forces involved and the resultant morphologies and creates a foundation for technologically relevant dynamic systems(1,2). In particular, reconfigurable surface topography as a means to control interfacial properties(3) has recently been explored using responsive gels(4), shape-memory polymers(5), liquid crystals(6-8) and hybrid composites(9-14), including magnetically active slippery surfaces(12-14). However, these designs exhibit a limited range of topographical changes and thus a restricted scope of function. Here we introduce a hierarchical magnetoresponsive composite surface, made by infiltrating a ferrofluid into a microstructured matrix (termed ferrofluid-containing liquid-infused porous surfaces, or FLIPS). We demonstrate various topographical reconfigurations at multiple length scales and a broad range of associated emergent behaviours. An applied magneticf-ield gradient induces the movement of magnetic nanoparticles suspended in the ferrofluid, which leads to microscale flow of the ferrofluid first above and then within the microstructured surface. This redistribution changes the initially smooth surface of the ferrofluid (which is immobilized by the porous matrix through capillary forces) into various multiscale hierarchical topographies shaped by the size, arrangement and orientation of the confining microstructures in the magnetic field. We analyse the spatial and temporal dynamics of these reconfigurations theoretically and experimentally as a function of the balance between capillary and magnetic pressures(15-19) and of the geometric anisotropy of the FLIPS system. Several interesting functions at three different length scales are demonstrated: self-assembly of colloidal particles at the micrometre scale; regulated flow of liquid droplets at the millimetre scale; and switchable adhesion and friction, liquid pumping and removal of biofilms at the centimetre scale. We envision that FLIPS could be used as part of integrated control systems for the manipulation and transport of matter, thermal management, microfluidics and fouling-release materials.

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