articleScienceNov 28, 2014GREEN OA

Turning a surface superrepellent even to completely wetting liquids

University of California, Los Angeles · La Jolla Bioengineering Institute

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Superhydrophobic and superoleophobic surfaces have so far been made by roughening a hydrophobic material. However, no surfaces were able to repel extremely-low-energy liquids such as fluorinated solvents, which completely wet even the most hydrophobic material. We show how roughness alone, if made of a specific doubly reentrant structure that enables very low liquid-solid contact fraction, can render the surface of any material superrepellent. Starting from a completely wettable material (silica), we micro- and nanostructure its surface to make it superomniphobic and bounce off all available liquids, including perfluorohexane. The same superomniphobicity is further confirmed with identical surfaces of a metal…

Citation impact

1,132
total citations
FWCI
36.29
Percentile
100%
References
31
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Wetting
  • Materials science
  • Contact angle
  • Surface energy
  • Coating
  • Superhydrophobic coating
  • Nanostructure
  • Polymer
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