4.8 Article

3D-Printed Bioinspired Cassie-Baxter Wettability for Controllable Microdroplet Manipulation

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 1979-1987

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c18952

Keywords

bio-inspired structures; P mu SL 3D printing; Cassie-Baxter wettability; droplet manipulation; LB method

Funding

  1. Key-Area Research and Development Program of Guangdong Province [2020B090923003]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51722503, 51621004]

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This paper presents a bioinspired surface fabricated using projection micro-stereolithography technique, allowing continuous adjustment of wettability. The surface exhibits potential applications in various fields and the underlying control mechanisms are revealed.
It is a great challenge to fabricate a surface with Cassie-Baxter wettability that can be continuously adjusted from hydrophilicity to superhydrophobicity by changing of geometric parameters. In this paper, we propose and demonstrate a bioinspired surface fabricated by using a projection micro-stereolithography (P mu SL) based 3D printing technique to address the challenge. Independent of materials, the bioinspired textured surface has a maximum contact angle (CA) of 171 degrees, which is even higher than that of the omniphobic springtail skin we try to imitate. Most significantly, we are able to control the CA of the bioinspired surface in the range of 55-171 degrees and the adhesion force from 71 to 99 mu N continuously by only changing the geometric parameters of the bioinspired microstructures. The underlying mechanisms of the CA control of our bioinspired surface are also revealed by using a multi-phase lattice Boltzmann model. Furthermore, we demonstrate potential applications in droplet-based microreactors, nonloss water transportation, and coalescence of water droplets by employing our 3D-printed bioinspired structures with their remarkable precise Cassie-Baxter wettability control and petal effects. The present results potentially pave a new way for designing next generation functional surfaces for microdroplet manipulation, droplet-based biodetection, antifouling surfaces, and cell culture.

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