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Enhancing condensation on soft substrates through bulk lubricant infusion

Authors :
Sharma, Chander Shekhar
Milionis, Athanasios
Naga, Abhinav
Lam, Cheuk Wing Edmond
Rodriguez, Gabriel
Del Ponte, Marco Francesco
Negri, Valentina
Raoul, Hopf
D'Acunzi, Maria
Butt, Hans-Jürgen
Vollmer, Doris
Poulikakos, Dimos
Source :
Adv. Funct. Mater. 2022, 32, 2109633
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Soft substrates such as polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) enhance droplet nucleation during the condensation of water vapour, because their deformability inherently reduces the energetic threshold for heterogeneous nucleation relative to rigid substrates. However, this enhanced droplet nucleation is counteracted later in the condensation cycle, when the viscoelastic dissipation inhibits condensate droplet shedding from the substrate. Here, we show that bulk lubricant infusion in the soft substrate is a potential pathway for overcoming this limitation. We demonstrate that even 5% bulk lubricant infusion in PDMS reduces viscoelastic dissipation in the substrate by more than 30 times and more than doubles the droplet nucleation density. We correlate the droplet nucleation and growth rate with the material properties controlled by design, i.e. the fraction and composition of uncrosslinked chains, shear modulus, and viscoelastic dissipation. Through in-situ, microscale condensation on the substrates, we show that the increase in nucleation density and reduction in pre-coalescence droplet growth rate is insensitive to the percentage of lubricant in PDMS. Our results indicate the presence of a lubricant layer on the substrate surface that cloaks the growing condensate droplets. We visualize the cloaking effect and show that lubricant infusion in PDMS significantly increases the rate of cloaking compared to PDMS without any lubricant infusion. Finally, we show that the overall enhanced condensation due to bulk lubricant infusion in PDMS leads to more than 40% increase in dewing on the substrate.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Adv. Funct. Mater. 2022, 32, 2109633
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2108.12002
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202109633