Issue 38, 2015

Direct observation of drops on slippery lubricant-infused surfaces

Abstract

For a liquid droplet to slide down a solid planar surface, the surface usually has to be tilted above a critical angle of approximately 10°. By contrast, droplets of nearly any liquid “slip” on lubricant-infused textured surfaces – so termed slippery surfaces – when tilted by only a few degrees. The mechanism of how the lubricant alters the static and dynamic properties of the drop remains elusive because the drop–lubricant interface is hidden. Here, we image the shape of drops on lubricant-infused surfaces by laser scanning confocal microscopy. The contact angle of the drop–lubricant interface with the substrate exceeds 140°, although macroscopic contour images suggest angles as low as 60°. Confocal microscopy of moving drops reveals fundamentally different processes at the front and rear. Drops recede via discrete depinning events from surface protrusions at a defined receding contact angle, whereas the advancing contact angle is 180°. Drops slide easily, as the apparent contact angles with the substrate are high and the drop–lubricant interfacial tension is typically lower than the drop–air interfacial tension. Slippery surfaces resemble superhydrophobic surfaces with two main differences: drops on a slippery surface are surrounded by a wetting ridge of adjustable height and the air underneath the drop in the case of a superhydrophobic surface is replaced by lubricant in the case of a slippery surface.

Graphical abstract: Direct observation of drops on slippery lubricant-infused surfaces

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Jul 2015
Accepted
13 Aug 2015
First published
13 Aug 2015
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2015,11, 7617-7626

Author version available

Direct observation of drops on slippery lubricant-infused surfaces

F. Schellenberger, J. Xie, N. Encinas, A. Hardy, M. Klapper, P. Papadopoulos, H. Butt and D. Vollmer, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 7617 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM01809A

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