Tunable Lotus Leaf Effect by 3D-printed stretchable objects

28 June 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Adjustable wettability is important for various fields, such as droplets manipulation and controlled surface adhesion. Herein, we present 3D stretchable structures with tunable superhydrophobicity fabricated by stereolithography-based printing at high resolution. The printing formulations comprise commonly available, non-fluorinated monomers with dispersed hydrophobic silica particles. 3D Lotus-like structures were printed, having micro-size pillars located at the external surfaces, with controlled dimensions and inter-spacings. The pillars design and the presence of the hydrophobic silica particles resulted in superhydrophobicity due to the surface structuring and entrapment of air in between the pillars. The best structures display a contact angle of 153.3°±1.3°and a rolling angle of 3.3°±0.5°, and their self-cleaning, water repellency, and buoyancy are demonstrated. Upon stretching the surfaces, the inter-pillar distances change, thus enabling tuning the wetting properties and achieving good control over the contact and rolling angles, while the stretching-induced superhydrophobicity is reversible. This approach can expand the potential applications of superhydrophobicity of soft materials to fields requiring control over the wetting properties, including soft robotics, biomedical devices, and stretchable electronics.

Keywords

superhydrophobicity
3D printing
soft materials
tuned wettability

Supplementary materials

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Video S1
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Self-cleaning demonstration of a printed surface with structural pillars. The surface was soiled with ground coffee and cleaned by rinsing it with DW.
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Video S2
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Demonstrator of placing a water drop on a superhydrophobic printed surface with structural pillars.
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Video S3
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Demonstrator of placing a water drop on a flat printed surface (without structural pillars).
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Video S4
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Non-wetting demonstration of a printed rectangular cuboid with a structural pillar and a printed rectangular cuboid without a structural pillar. The two printed objects were immersed in an aqueous dye solution.
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Video S5
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Demonstrator of the flexibility of the surface.
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Video S6
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Sliding angle demonstration: aqueous dye drops sliding off from a 20º tilted table on top of a 0% elongated printed surface with pillars dimensions of x=70 μm, y=90 μm, z=250 μm.
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Video S7
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Sliding angle demonstration: aqueous dye drops sliding off from a 6º tilted table on top of a 100% elongated printed surface with pillars dimensions of x=70 μm, y=90 μm, z=250 μm.
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Video S8
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Sliding angle demonstration: aqueous dye drops failing to slide off from a 6º tilted table on top of a 0% elongated printed surface with pillars dimensions of x=70 μm, y=90 μm, z=250 μm.
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