Directional Self-Transportation of Droplets on Superwetting Wedge-Shaped Surface in Air and Underliquid Environments.
Peizhang ZhouYuanyang YanJiang ChengCailong ZhouPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
The directional self-transportation of droplets has aroused great attention in microfluidic systems. However, most reported surfaces are mainly designed for driving water droplets to move in air, displaying low adaptability in complex environments. This work presents a wedge-shaped surface with multiple superwettability, i.e., superhydrophilicity/superoleophilicity and underwater superoleophobicity/underoil superhydrophobicity, fabricated by electrodeposition of a metal-organic framework on a copper sheet. This surface exhibited excellent performance for driving droplet self-transportation, regardless of the droplet type (water or oil) and environmental media (air or underliquids). In air, the wedge-shaped surface with wedge angle of 9.2° could move droplets of water and dodecane up to 24.5 mm and 17.9 mm, respectively. The movement of water droplet under dodecane, however, dropped from 24.5 mm to 22.1 mm, while the dodecane droplet underwater increased from 17.9 mm to 20.3 mm in moving displacement, indicating the underliquid environment is in favor of manipulation of oil droplets. Furthermore, the droplet convergence, transportation, and separation were achieved on the well-designed multiple wedge tracks in air with a total movement distance up to 60.0 mm. The test of micro-oil droplets collecting under water demonstrated that a sponge with two wedges has 2.1 times the oil droplet collection capacity over that of the sponge only, providing a new strategy for efficient treatment of the micro-oil droplets contaminated water.