4.7 Article

Experimental and theoretical study of electrowetting dynamics on slippery lubricant-infused porous surfaces

Journal

SENSORS AND ACTUATORS A-PHYSICAL
Volume 344, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.sna.2022.113734

Keywords

Electrowetting; Dynamictheory; SLIPS; Liquid-liquidinterface; Microfluidic

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61804071]
  2. National Key Research and Develop- ment Program of China [2017YFA0403101]

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This study investigates the dynamic behaviors of droplet electrowetting on slippery lubricant-infused porous surfaces (SLIPS). Experimental and numerical analysis reveal that the droplet always spreads smoothly to the equilibrium state without overshooting on SLIPS. The increase of applied voltage leads to overdamping of the droplet, with the settling time proportional to the 0.9th power of the electrowetting number. Additionally, it is found that the droplet spreads slowly due to the dominance of viscous dissipation of the oil-water interface with increasing silicone oil viscosity. The friction coefficient is found to be nearly proportional to the 1/6th power of oil viscosity, while being minimally influenced by applied voltage and oil thickness.
The droplet electrowetting dynamic behaviors on slippery lubricant-infused porous surfaces (SLIPS) remain elusive because the soft liquid-liquid interface nature is much different from solid dielectric hydrophobic sur-faces. To understand the dynamic process, the impact of the voltage applied, the oil thickness, and viscosity on dynamic electrowetting behavior was experimentally studied, respectively. Meanwhile, a numerical dynamic model was also developed for the quantitative interpretation of the droplet dynamic spreading process on SLIPS. It is found the droplet always spreads smoothly to the equilibrium state without overshooting on the SLIPS. The droplet is always over-damped with the increase of applied voltage, the settling time is proportional to the 0.9th power of the electrowetting number. Then, by changing the silicone oil viscosity, it is found the viscous dissi-pation of the oil-water interface becomes dominant, causing the droplet to spread slowly. By fitting the theo-retical models to experimental results, it is found the friction coefficient is nearly proportional to 1/6th power of oil viscosity and rarely influenced by applied voltage and oil thickness. Finally, it is found both the initial oil thickness and the high wetting ridge have a minor influence on the electrowetting dynamic spreading. The relationship between the actual oil layer thickness and the initial oil layer thickness was estimated. This study will provide helpful information and theory support for electrowetting-on-dielectric device design, lab on a chip, and other potential applications on SLIPS.

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