Condensation control on biphilic jumping droplet surface

ORAL

Abstract

Controlling condensation is crucial for applications such as thermal management or to maintain optical surface transparency in humid conditions. Condensation behavior can be controlled by surface structure: on nanoscale hydrophobic structures, droplets can jump out of the surface upon merging [1]. Making the nanostructures conical further amplifies the anticondensation property, as the jumping probability rises close to 100% [2]. The constant condensation removal allowed by the jumping mechanism significantly increases the heat transfer performance of the surface [3] and can be further improved by promoting nucleation with micrometric hydrophilic patterns [4]. Condensation removal limits the droplet size to the distance to its nearest neighbor which helps maintaining a good optical transparency. However, this distance depends on the random nucleation process and droplets nucleating far from each other will cover a large surface area before jumping which is detrimental for optical properties. In this presentation, we spatially control nucleation with biphilic patterns on a jumping droplet surface and study how it affects the condensation properties such as surface coverage, volume, or lifetime.

References

[1] Boreyko, J. B. & Chen, C. H., Physical review letters, 103(18), 184501, 2009.

[2] Mouterde, T. et al. Nature Materials, 16(6), 658-663, 2017.

[3] Miljkovic, N., & Wang, E. N. MRS bulletin, 38(5), 397-406. 2013.

[4] Hoque, M. J., et al. Cell Reports Physical Science, 3(4), 2022.

*TM acknowledges the financial support provided by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) - Grant-in-Aid for Early-Career Scientists, 22K14599. This work is also supported by JST SPRING, Grant Number JPMJSP2108.

Presenters

  • Hiroki Yachida

    • University of Tokyo

Authors

  • Hiroki Yachida

    • University of Tokyo
  • Noémie Muquet

    • The University of Tokyo
  • Sophia Laney

    • University College London
  • Martyna Michalska

    • University College London
  • Ioannis Papakonstantinou

    • University College London
  • Timothée Mouterde

    • The University of Tokyo