4.6 Article

Hydrophobized metallic meshes can ease water droplet rolling

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 17, Issue 31, Pages 7311-7321

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sm00746g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM) [DF201016]
  2. King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (K. A. CARE)

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This study investigates the rolling behavior of liquid droplets on hydrophobized metallic meshes through experiments and simulations. The findings suggest that hydrophobized meshes can increase droplet velocity and reduce droplet kinetic energy dissipation. Additionally, increasing droplet volume can enhance droplet velocity, even with increased frictional forces at the liquid-mesh interface.
Rolling liquid droplets are of great interest for various applications including self-cleaning of surfaces. Interfacial resistance, in terms of pinning and shear rate, has a critical role in droplet rolling dynamics on hydrophobic surfaces. Lowering the interfacial resistance requires reducing the droplet wetting length and droplet fluid contact area on hydrophobic surfaces. The present study examines droplet rolling behavior on inclined hydrophobized metallic meshes, which facilitate reduced wetting length and contact area of droplets. Experiments are carried out using a high-speed recording facility to evaluate droplet translational and rolling velocities over various sizes of hydrophobized meshes. The flow field inside the droplet fluid is simulated in 3-dimensional space mimicking the conditions of experiments. The findings reveal that droplet translational velocity attains significantly higher values for hydrophobized meshes than plain hydrophobized metallic surfaces. Increasing the mesh size enhances the droplet velocity and reduces the droplet kinetic energy dissipation created by interfacial surface tension and shear forces. Increasing the droplet volume enhances the droplet velocity despite the fact that pinning and frictional forces increase at the liquid-mesh interface. Hence, for rolling droplets on the mesh surface, the increase in the gravitational force component becomes larger than the increase in interfacial pinning and frictional forces.

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