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Study of drop impact dynamics on the hydrophobic leaf surface of an aquatic plant - Pistia stratiotes case study.

Ewa PapierowskaMichał BeczekRafał MazurJan SzatyłowiczJoanna SzewińskaCezary PolakowskiMagdalena RyżakTomasz StańczykAgata SochanJustyna Frankowska-ŁukawskaAndrzej Bieganowski
Published in: Journal of experimental botany (2023)
P. stratiotes is an example of an aquatic plant with a complex structure that allows it to stay afloat. It grows quickly and in large numbers becomes an undesirable plant as an invasive species that should be removed from the environment. Describing the dynamics of a water drop splash on the P. stratiotes leaves can contribute to increasing knowledge of its behavior and finding alternative methods for eradicating this plant or using it for the benefit of the environment. The non-wettable surface of P. stratiotes presents a complex structure, i.e., simple uniseriate trichomes and also ridges and veins. The experiments included analyzing the drop impact on a leaf placed on the water surface and recorded by high-speed cameras. Based on the recordings, quantitative and qualitative analyses were performed. After impacting the leaf, the water drop spread until it reached its maximum surface area accompanied by the ejection of early droplets in the initial stage of the phenomenon. Thereafter, three scenarios of water behavior were observed: (i) drop receding and stabilization, (ii) drop receding and ejection of late droplets formed in the later stage as an effect of elastic deformation of the leaf, and (iii) drop breaking apart and ejection of late droplets. The results indicated that the increasing kinetic energy of the impacting drops expressed by the Weber number and the complex leaf surface have an impact on the course of the splash. The simple uniseriate trichomes of the P. stratiotes leaf and the high energy of the falling drops were responsible for the formation and characteristics of the early droplets. The presence of ridges and veins and the leaf's mechanical response had an impact on the occurrence of late droplets.
Keyphrases
  • high speed
  • risk assessment
  • climate change
  • systematic review
  • single molecule
  • atomic force microscopy