Lubricant-Infused Surfaces for Low-Surface-Tension Fluids: Promise versus Reality

被引:203
作者
Sett, Soumyadip [1 ]
Yan, Xiao [1 ]
Barac, George [2 ]
Bolton, Leslie W. [3 ]
Miljkovic, Nenad [1 ,4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Illinois, Dept Mech Sci & Engn, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
[2] BP Int Ltd, 150 W Warrenville Rd, Naperville, IL 60563 USA
[3] BP Plc, Chertsey Rd, Sunbury On Thames TW16 7LN, Middx, England
[4] Univ Illinois, Frederick Seitz Mat Res Lab, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
[5] Kyushu Univ, WPI, I2CNER, Nishi Ku, 744 Motooka, Fukuoka 8190395, Japan
关键词
LIS; SLIPS; lubricants; miscibility; cloaking; low-surface tension; PENDANT DROP; ENHANCED CONDENSATION; SLIPPERY SURFACES; PERFORMANCE; DYNAMICS; ICE;
D O I
10.1021/acsami.7b10756
中图分类号
TB3 [工程材料学];
学科分类号
0805 ; 080502 ;
摘要
The past few decades have seen substantial effort for the design and manufacturing of hydrophobic structured surfaces for enhanced steam condensation in water based applications. Such surfaces promote dropwise condensation and easy droplet removal. However, less priority has been given to applications utilizing low-surface-tension fluids as the condensate. Lubricant-infused surfaces (LISs) or slippery liquid-infused porous surfaces (SLIPSs) have recently been developed, where the atomically smooth, defect-free slippery surface leads to reduced pinning of water droplets and omniphobic characteristics. The remarkable results of LISs and SLIPSs with a range of working fluid droplets give hope of their viability with low-surface-tension condensates. However, presence of the additional liquid in the form of lubricant brings other issues to consider. Here, in an effort to study the dropwise condensation potential of LISs and SLIPSs, we investigate the miscibility of a range of low-surface-tension fluids with widely used lubricants in LIS and SLIPS design. We consider a wide range of condensate surface tensions (12-73 mN/m) and different categories of lubricants with varied viscosities (5-2700 cSt), namely, fluorinated Krytox oils, hydrocarbon silicone oils, mineral oil, and ionic liquids. In addition, we use both theory and pendant drop experiments to predict the cloaking behavior of the lubricants and immiscible condensate working fluid pairs. Our work not only shows that careful attention must be paid to lubricant condensate selection to create long-lasting LISs or SLIPSs but also develops lubricant selection design guidelines for stable LISs and SLIPSs for enhanced condensation in applications utilizing low-surface-tension working fluids.
引用
收藏
页码:36400 / 36408
页数:9
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