Topological wetting states of microdroplets on closed-loop structured surfaces: Breakdown of the Gibbs equation at the microscale
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Lin, Dongdong; Wang, Shixian; Xu, Wenwu; Chen, Yuhao; Li, Pei; Fang, Ye-Guang; Zhao, Wenhui; Duan, Xiangmei; Yang, Xinju; Jiang, Zuimin; Fang, Wei-Hai; Zeng, Xiao Cheng; Francisco, Joseph S.; Gao, Yurui
署名单位:
Ningbo University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; National Center for Nanoscience & Technology, CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS; Fudan University; Beijing Normal University; City University of Hong Kong; University of Pennsylvania
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-11635
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2315730121
发表日期:
2024-04-09
关键词:
liquid
microfluidics
wettability
resistance
摘要:
Microdroplets are a class of soft matter that has been extensively employed for chemical, biochemical, and industrial applications. However, fabricating microdroplets with largely controllable contact-area shape and apparent contact angle, a key prerequisite for their applications, is still a challenge. Here, by engineering a type of surface with homocentric closed-loop microwalls/microchannels, we can achieve facile size, shape, and contact-angle tunability of microdroplets on the textured surfaces by design. More importantly, this class of surface topologies (with universal genus value = 1) allows us to reveal that the conventional Gibbs equation (widely used for assessing the edge effect on the apparent contact angle of macrodroplets) seems no longer applicable for water microdroplets or nanodroplets (evidenced by independent molecular dynamics simulations). Notably, for the flat surface with the intrinsic contact angle similar to 0 degrees, we find that the critical contact angle on the microtextured counterparts (at edge angle 90 degrees) can be as large as >130 degrees, rather than 90 degrees according to the Gibbs equation. Experiments show that the breakdown of the Gibbs equation occurs for microdroplets of different types of liquids including alcohol and hydrocarbon oils. Overall, the microtextured surface design and topological wetting states not only offer opportunities for diverse applications of microdroplets such as controllable chemical reactions and low-cost circuit fabrications but also provide testbeds for advancing the fundamental surface science of wetting beyond the Gibbs equation.