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Filefish‐Inspired Surface Design for Anisotropic Underwater Oleophobicity
Author(s) -
Cai Yue,
Lin Ling,
Xue Zhongxin,
Liu Mingjie,
Wang Shutao,
Jiang Lei
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201302034
Subject(s) - materials science , wetting , anisotropy , underwater , polydimethylsiloxane , nanotechnology , contact angle , composite material , surface energy , optics , oceanography , physics , geology
Surfaces with anisotropic wettability, widely found in nature, have inspired the development of one‐dimensional water control on surfaces relying on the well‐arranged surface features. Controlling the wetting behavior of organic liquids, especially the motion of oil fluid on surfaces, is of great importance for a broad range of applications including oil transportation, oil‐repellent coatings, and water/oil separation. However, anisotropic oil‐wetting surfaces remain unexplored. Here, the unique skin of a filefish Navodon septentrionalis shows anisotropic oleophobicity under water. On the rough skin of N. septentrionalis , oil droplets tend to roll off in a head‐to‐tail direction, but pin in the opposite direction. This pronounced wetting anisotropy results from the oriented hook‐like spines arrayed on the fish skin. It inspires further exploration of the artificial anisotropic underwater oleophobic surfaces: By mimicking the oriented hook‐like microstructure on a polydimethylsiloxane layer via soft lithography and subsequent oxygen‐plasma treatment to make the PDMS hydrophilic, artificial fish skin is fabricated which has similar anisotropic underwater oleophobicity. Drawn from the processing of artificial fish skin, a simple principle is proposed to achieve anisotropic underwater oleophobicity by adjusting the hydrophilicity of surface composition and the anisotropic microtextures. This principle can guide the simple mass manufacturing of various inexpensive high surface‐energy materials, and the principle is demonstrated on commercial cloth corduroy. This study will profit broad applications involving low‐energy, low‐expense oil transportation, underwater oil collection, and oil‐repellant coatings on ship hulls and oil pipelines.