Super‐Hydrophobic Surfaces: From Natural to Artificial
Chinese Academy of Sciences · Institute of Chemistry
Abstract
Abstract Super‐hydrophobic surfaces, with a water contact angle (CA) greater than 150°, have attracted much interest for both fundamental research and practical applications. Recent studies on lotus and rice leaves reveal that a super‐hydrophobic surface with both a large CA and small sliding angle (α) needs the cooperation of micro‐ and nanostructures, and the arrangement of the microstructures on this surface can influence the way a water droplet tends to move. These results from the natural world provide a guide for constructing artificial super‐hydrophobic surfaces and designing surfaces with controllable wettability. Accordingly, super‐hydrophobic surfaces of polymer nanofibers and differently patterned…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 31.92
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
10- LFLibang Feng
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Chemistry
- SLShuhui Li
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Chemistry
- YLYuanxin Li
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Chemistry
- HLHong Li
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Chemistry
- LZLiang Zhang
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Chemistry
Topics & keywords
- Materials science
- Lotus effect
- Contact angle
- Wetting
- Nanotechnology
- Polymer
- Nanostructure
- Water repellent