Patterned Superhydrophobic Surfaces: Toward a Synthetic Mimic of the Namib Desert Beetle
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
The present study demonstrates a surface structure that mimics the water harvesting wing surface of the Namib Desert beetle. Hydrophilic patterns on superhydrophobic surfaces were created with water/2-propanol solutions of a polyelectrolyte to produce surfaces with extreme hydrophobic contrast. Selective deposition of multilayer films onto the hydrophilic patterns introduces different properties to the area including superhydrophilicity. Potential applications of such surfaces include water harvesting surfaces, controlled drug release coatings, open-air microchannel devices, and lab-on-chip devices.
Citation impact
777
total citations
- FWCI
- 23.83
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 41
Citations per year
Authors
7Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Superhydrophilicity
- Nanotechnology
- Materials science
- Surface modification
- Deposition (geology)
- Polyelectrolyte
- Contact angle
- Chemical engineering
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Clean water and sanitation
No related works found for this paper.