4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Mimicking lizard-like surface structures upon ultrashort laser pulse irradiation of inorganic materials

Journal

APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE
Volume 418, Issue -, Pages 499-507

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsusc.2016.12.112

Keywords

Femtosecond laser ablation; Laser-induced periodic surfacestructures; Lizard; Surface wetting; Fluid transport; Steel

Funding

  1. European Horizon FET OPEN Program [665337]

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Inorganic materials, such as steel, were functionalized by ultrashort laser pulse irradiation (fs- to ps-range) to modify the surface's wetting behavior. The laser processing was performed by scanning the laser beam across the surface of initially polished flat sample material. A systematic experimental study of the laser processing parameters (peak fluence, scan velocity, line overlap) allowed the identification of different regimes associated with characteristic surface morphologies (laser-induced periodic surface structures, grooves, spikes, etc.). Analyses of the surface using optical as well as scanning electron microscopy revealed morphologies providing the optimum similarity to the natural skin of lizards. For mimicking skin structures of moisture-harvesting lizards towards an optimization of the surface wetting behavior, additionally a two-step laser processing strategy was established for realizing hierarchical microstructures. In this approach, micrometer-scaled capillaries (step 1) were superimposed by a laser generated regular array of small dimples (step 2). Optical focus variation imaging measurements finally disclosed the three dimensional topography of the laser processed surfaces derived from lizard skin structures. The functionality of these surfaces was analyzed in view of wetting properties. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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