4.8 Article

How Frost Forms and Grows on Lubricated Micro- and Nanostructured Surfaces

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages 4658-4668

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c09152

Keywords

wicking; icing; condensation frosting; thin film; frost percolation; slippery surface slips

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program LubISS [722497]
  2. ERC Advanced grant [340391]
  3. German Research Foundation (DFG) [2171]
  4. Max Planck University Twente Center for Complex Fluid Dynamics
  5. Max Planck Graduate Center
  6. US National Science Foundation [NSF CBET-1604351, DMS-1815613]
  7. NJIT Faculty Seed Grant
  8. Collaborative Research Center 1194
  9. European Research Council (ERC) [340391] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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This study investigates the dynamics of condensation frosting on different structured surfaces and reveals the influence of frost on water droplet growth and propagation, as well as the reorganization of lubricant thin film. These insights into the coupling between lubricant flow and frost formation/propagation can help improve control over frosting by adjusting surface design and features.
Frost is ubiquitously observed in nature whenever warmer and more humid air encounters colder than melting point surfaces (e.g., morning dew frosting). However, frost formation is problematic as it damages infrastructure, roads, crops, and the efficient operation of industrial equipment (i.e., heat exchangers, cooling fins). While lubricant-infused surfaces offer promising antifrosting properties, underlying mechanisms of frost formation and its consequential effect on frost-to-surface dynamics remain elusive. Here, we monitor the dynamics of condensation frosting on micro- and hierarchically structured surfaces (the latter combines micro- with nanofeatures) infused with lubricant, temporally and spatially resolved using laser scanning confocal microscopy. The growth dynamics of water droplets differs for micro- and hierarchically structured surfaces, by hindered drop coalescence on the hierarchical ones. However, the growth and propagation of frost dendrites follow the same scaling on both surface types. Frost propagation is accompanied by a reorganization of the lubricant thin film. We numerically quantify the experimentally observed flow profile using an asymptotic long-wave model. Our results reveal that lubricant reorganization is governed by two distinct driving mechanisms, namely: (1) frost propagation speed and (2) frost dendrite morphology. These in-depth insights into the coupling between lubricant flow and frost formation/propagation enable an improved control over frosting by adjusting the design and features of the surface.

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