Litcius/Paper detail

Pushing the Limit of Beetle‐Inspired Condensation on Biphilic Quasi‐Liquid Surfaces

Dylan Boylan, Deepak Monga, Li Shan, Zongqi Guo, Xianming Dai

2023Advanced Functional Materials76 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Massive studies concern the development of low‐carbon water and energy systems. Specifically, surfaces with special wettability to promote vapor‐to‐liquid condensation have been widely studied, but current solutions suffer from poor heat transfer performances due to inefficient droplet removal. In this study, the limit of condensation on a beetle‐inspired biphilic quasi‐liquid surface (QLS) in a steam environment is pushed, which provides a heat flux 100 times higher than that in atmospheric condensation. Unlike the beetle‐inspired surfaces that have sticky hydrophilic domains, the biphilic QLS consists of PEGylated and siloxane polymers as hydrophilic and hydrophobic quasi‐liquid patterns with the contact angle hysteresis of 3° and 1°, respectively. More importantly, each hydrophilic slippery pattern behaves like a slippery bridge that accelerates droplet coalescence and removal. As a result, the condensed droplets grow rapidly and shed off. It is demonstrated that the biphilic‐striped QLS shows a 60% higher water harvesting rate in atmospheric condensation and a 170% higher heat transfer coefficient in steam condensation than the conventional beetle‐inspired surface. This study provides a new paradigm to push the limit of condensation heat transfer at a high heat flux, which sheds light on the next‐generation surface design for water and energy sustainability.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceCondensationWettingContact angleCoalescence (physics)Surface energyChemical engineeringHeat transferChemical physicsNanotechnologyThermodynamicsComposite materialChemistryPhysicsAstrobiologyEngineeringSurface Modification and SuperhydrophobicityAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsFluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer