4.7 Article

Mechanically Switchable Wetting Petal Effect in Self-Patterned Nanocolumnar Films on Poly(dimethylsiloxane)

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano11102566

Keywords

GLAD coatings; PDMS; anisotropic wetting; droplet sliding; self-surface patterning

Funding

  1. EU H2020 program [899352 (FETOPEN-01-2018-2019-2020-SOUNDofICE)]
  2. AEI-MICINN [PID2019-110430GB-C21, PID2019-109603RA-I0, MAT2013-40852-R, MAT2013-42900-P, MINECO-CSIC 201560E055]
  3. Consejeria de Economia, Conocimiento, Empresas y Universidad de la Junta de Andalucia (PAIDI-2020) [AT17-6079, P18-RT-3480]

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This study demonstrates that by coating PDMS elastomers with nanostructured TiO2 films and subjecting them to mechanical deformation, surfaces can exhibit self-patterning with well-ordered micro-scaled grooves. These patterned surfaces can be reversibly modified by mechanical deformation, allowing for switchable and reversible wetting effects and liquid droplet sliding.
Switchable mechanically induced changes in the wetting behavior of surfaces are of paramount importance for advanced microfluidic, self-cleaning and biomedical applications. In this work we show that the well-known polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) elastomer develops self-patterning when it is coated with nanostructured TiO2 films prepared by physical vapor deposition at glancing angles and subsequently subjected to a mechanical deformation. Thus, unlike the disordered wrinkled surfaces typically created by deformation of the bare elastomer, well-ordered and aligned micro-scaled grooves form on TiO2/PDMS after the first post-deposition bending or stretching event. These regularly patterned surfaces can be reversibly modified by mechanical deformation, thereby inducing a switchable and reversible wetting petal effect and the sliding of liquid droplets. When performed in a dynamic way, this mechanical actuation produces a unique capacity of liquid droplets (water and diiodomethane) transport and tweezing, this latter through their selective capture and release depending on their volume and chemical characteristics. Scanning electron and atomic force microscopy studies of the strained samples showed that a dual-scale roughness, a parallel alignment of patterned grooves and their reversible widening upon deformation, are critical factors controlling this singular sliding behavior and the possibility to tailor their response by the appropriate manufacturing of surface structures.

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