4.8 Article

Patterning and Reversible Actuation of Liquid Gallium Alloys by Preventing Adhesion on Rough Surfaces

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 10, Issue 51, Pages 44686-44695

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.8b13099

Keywords

superhydrophobic surfaces; surface chemistry; wetting; adhesion; liquid metal; reconfigurable antenna; patterning

Funding

  1. Triangle MRSEC [DMR-1121107]
  2. Air Force Research Laboratories
  3. NSF ASSIST Center for Advanced Self Powered Systems of Integrated Sensors and Technologies Center [EEC-1160483]
  4. Army Research Office [W911NF-17-1-0216]
  5. State of North Carolina
  6. National Science Foundation [ECCS-1542015]
  7. U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-ACS2-07NA27344, LLNL-JRNL-761177]

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This work reports a simple approach to form, study, and utilize rough coatings that prevent the adhesion of gallium-based liquid metal alloys. Typically, liquids with large interfacial tension do not wet nonreactive surfaces, regardless of surface topography. However, these alloys form a surface oxide skin that adheres to many substrates, even those with low surface energy. This work reports a simple approach to render closed channels and surfaces, including soft materials, to be oxide-phobic via spray-coating (NeverWet, which is commercially available and inexpensive). Surface spectroscopic techniques and metrology tools elucidate the coatings to comprise silica nanoparticles grafted with silicones that exhibit dual length scales of roughness. Although prior work shows the importance of surface roughness in preventing adhesion, the present work confirms that both hydrophobic and hydrophilic rough surfaces prevent oxide adhesion. Furthermore, the coating enables reversible actuation through submillimeter closed channels to form a reconfigurable antenna in the gigahertz range without the need for corrosive acids or bases that remove the oxide. In addition, the coating enables open surface patterning of conductive traces of liquid metal. This shows it is possible to actuate liquid metals in air without leaving neither metal nor oxide residue on surfaces to enable reconfigurable electronics, microfluidics, and soft electrodes.

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