articleRSC AdvancesOct 23, 2012Closed access

Bioinspired self-cleaning surfaces with superhydrophobicity, superoleophobicity, and superhydrophilicity

The Ohio State University · Okayama University

Indexed incrossrefdoaj

Abstract

Self-cleaning methods currently employed are based on understanding of the functions, structures, and principles of various objects found in living nature. Three types of surfaces, including superhydrophobic, superoleophobic, and superhydrophilic, offer solutions to keep a surface clean. In this review article, an overview of self-cleaning surfaces inspired by nine biological objects is provided: lotus leaves, rice leaves, cicada wings, butterfly wings, snail shell, fish scale, shark skin, pitcher plant, and photosynthesis. These surfaces exhibit special properties such as low adhesion, low drag, anisotropic wetting, anti-reflection, directional adhesion, anti-fouling, photocatalysis, self-sterilizing, and…

Citation impact

834
total citations
FWCI
25.42
Percentile
100%
References
104
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Superhydrophilicity
  • Biofouling
  • Iridescence
  • Nanotechnology
  • Lotus effect
  • Materials science
  • Adhesion
  • Wetting
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