Litcius/Paper detail

Energy dissipation during homogeneous wetting of surfaces with randomly and periodically distributed cylindrical pillars

Pawan Kumar, Paul Mulvaney, Dalton J. E. Harvie

2023Journal of Colloid and Interface Science12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

HYPOTHESIS: Understanding contact angle hysteresis on rough surfaces is important as most industrially relevant and naturally occurring surfaces possess some form of random or structured roughness. We hypothesise that hysteresis can be described by the dilute defect model of Joanny & de Gennes [1] and that the energy dissipation occurring during the stick-slip motion of the contact line is key to developing a predictive equation for hysteresis. EXPERIMENTS: =112.0°). FINDINGS: A methodology for averaging the measured advancing and receding contact angles on random surfaces is presented. Based on these results correlations for roughness-induced energy dissipation are derived, and an equation for predicting the advancing and receding contact angles during homogeneous (Wenzel) wetting on random surfaces is presented. Equations that predict the onset of the alternate wetting conditions of hemiwicking, split-advancing, split-receding and heterogeneous (Cassie) wetting are also derived, thus defining the range of validity for the homogeneous wetting equation. A 'cluster' concept is proposed to explain the measurably higher hysteresis exhibited by structured surfaces compared to random surfaces.

Topics & Concepts

WettingHysteresisDissipationWetting transitionContact angleSlip (aerodynamics)HomogeneousSurface energyMaterials scienceSurface finishSurface roughnessMechanicsRange (aeronautics)Composite materialPhysicsStatistical physicsCondensed matter physicsThermodynamicsSurface Modification and SuperhydrophobicityAdhesion, Friction, and Surface InteractionsFluid Dynamics and Thin Films