Synthetic Butterfly Scale Surfaces with Compliance‐Tailored Anisotropic Drop Adhesion

Abstract

Many natural surfaces such as butterfly wings, beetles' backs, and rice leaves exhibit anisotropic liquid adhesion; this is of fundamental interest and is important to applications including self‐cleaning surfaces, microfluidics, and phase change energy conversion. Researchers have sought to mimic the anisotropic adhesion of butterfly wings using rigid surface textures, though natural butterfly scales are sufficiently compliant to be deflected by capillary forces exerted by drops. Here, inspired by the flexible scales of the Morpho aega butterfly wing, synthetic surfaces coated with flexible carbon nanotube (CNT) microscales with anisotropic drop adhesion properties are fabricated. The curved CNT scales are fabricated by a strain‐engineered chemical vapor deposition technique, giving ≈5000 scales of ≈10 µm thickness in a 1 cm2 area. Using various designed CNT scale arrays, it is demonstrated that the anisotropy of drop roll‐off angle is influenced by the geometry, compliance, and hydrophobicity of the scales; and a maximum roll‐off anisotropy of 6.2° is achieved. These findings are supported by a model that relates the adhesion anisotropy to the scale geometry, compliance, and wettability. The electrical conductivity and mechanical robustness of the CNTs, and the ability to fabricate complex multidirectional patterns, suggest further opportunities to create engineered synthetic scale surfaces.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Feb 13, 2019
Source ID
10.1002/adma.201807686

Entities

People

  • A. John Hart
  • Adam T. Paxson
  • Brian R. Solomon
  • Dan Soto
  • Hangbo Zhao
  • Kripa K Varanasi
  • Sanha Kim
  • Sei Jin Park

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • National Science Foundation
  • United States Department of Energy

Tags

Readers

  • Fluid Mechanics and Fluid Dynamics.
  • Nanocomposite Materials Science