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Fabrication of Transferable and Micro/Nanostructured Superhydrophobic Surfaces Using Demolding and iCVD Processes.

Wang TianChao LiKong LiuFangyuan MaKaiwen ChuXuan TangZhijie WangShizhong YueShengchun Qu
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Superhydrophobic surfaces possess enormous potential in various applications on account of their versatile functionalities. However, artificial superhydrophobic surfaces with ultralow solid/liquid adhesion often require complicated structure fabrication and surface fluorination processes. Here, we designed a superhydrophobic surface possessed of micro/nanoscale structures by employing facile and low-cost demolding and initiated chemical vapor deposition (iCVD) processes. The achieved micro/nanostructured superhydrophobic surface has a maximum static contact angle of ∼170°, a roll-off angle and contact angle hysteresis below 1°, ultralow solid/liquid adhesion for water droplets, and maintains excellent superhydrophobicity after exposure to strongly corrosive species, like strong acid/base and salt solutions, for 60 h. This reasonability-designed method of creating the superhydrophobic surface could provide valuable guidelines for the manufacture of transferable superhydrophobic surfaces and facilitate potential applications extending from optoelectronic devices to self-cleaning materials, such as solar cells, windows, and electronic displays.
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