4.8 Article

Making a splash with water repellency

Journal

NATURE PHYSICS
Volume 3, Issue 3, Pages 180-183

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nphys545

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A splash is usually heard when a solid body enters water at large velocity. This phenomenon originates from the formation of an air cavity during the impact. The classical view of impacts on free surfaces relies solely on fluid inertia; therefore, surface properties and viscous effects should be negligible at sufficiently large velocities. In strong contrast to this large-scale hydrodynamic viewpoint, we demonstrate here that the wettability of the impacting body is a key factor in determining the degree of splashing. This unforeseen fact is further embodied in the dependence of the threshold velocity for air entrainment on the contact angle of the impacting body, as well as on the ratio between surface tension and fluid viscosity, thereby de. ning a critical capillary velocity. As a paradigm, superhydrophobic impactors make a big splash for any impact velocity.

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