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Chi-Vinh Ngo

Bio: Chi-Vinh Ngo is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Contact angle & Wetting. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 18 publications receiving 513 citations. Previous affiliations of Chi-Vinh Ngo include University of Ulsan & The Institute of Optics.

Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, a combination of pulse laser ablation and simple post-processing was used to control the wettability of aluminum surfaces in a short time of only a few hours.

113 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, a nanosecond laser textured copper surface from hydrophilic to superhydrophobic using additional low-temperature annealing (100°C) was demonstrated.

110 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, a simple annealing post process was developed to accelerate the wettability transition from hydrophilicity to superhydrophobicity without the use of additional chemical treatment.

109 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, an economical method to fabricate a transparent superhydrophobic surface that uses grid patterning was described, and the effects of grid geometry in determining the wettability and transparency of the fabricated surfaces were reported.

59 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The classification of silicones in the literature is as broad as their properties and applications; in this work, we have restricted the discussion to polydimethylsiloxanes as discussed by the authors.

360 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, a review of recent research progress in water wetting state, ice nucleation, and ice adhesion from both theoretical and application perspectives is presented, with an emphasis on reducing the water adhesion at low temperatures.

213 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2019
TL;DR: This work extensively discussed why the laser-induced freshly outer layer was super-hydrophilic and how the airborne hydrocarbons were chemisorbed and further guides industry to effectively modify surface chemistry to reduce wettability transition period and rapidly produce stable and durable super-Hydrophobic surfaces.
Abstract: Super-hydrophobic surfaces are attractive due to self-cleaning and anti-corrosive behaviors in harsh environments. Laser texturing offers a facile method to produce super-hydrophobic surfaces. However, the results indicated that the fresh laser ablated surface was generally super-hydrophilic and then gradually reached super-hydrophobic state when exposed to ambient air for certain time. Investigating wettability changing mechanism could contribute to reducing wettability transition period and improving industrial productivity. To solve this problem, we have studied the bare aluminum surface, fresh laser ablated super-hydrophilic surface, 15-day air exposed surface, and the aged super-hydrophobic surface by time-dependent water contact angle (WCA) and rolling angle (RA), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), 3D profile and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The origins of super-hydrophilicity of the fresh laser ablated surface are identified as (1) the formation of hierarchical rough structures and (2) the surface chemical modifications (the decrease of nonpolar carbon, the formation of hydrophilic alumina and residual unsaturated atoms). The chemisorbed nonpolar airborne hydrocarbons from air moisture contributed to the gradual super-hydrophobic transition, which can be proved by the thermal annealing experiment. Particularly, to clearly explore the wettability transition mechanism, we extensively discussed why the laser-induced freshly outer layer was super-hydrophilic and how the airborne hydrocarbons were chemisorbed. This work not only provides useful insights into the formation mechanism of laser ablated super-hydrophobic surfaces, but also further guides industry to effectively modify surface chemistry to reduce wettability transition period and rapidly produce stable and durable super-hydrophobic surfaces.

164 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: It is revealed that properly designed nanostructures should enable nanometric jumping droplets, which would further enhance jumping-droplet condensers for heat transfer, antifogging, and antifrosting applications.
Abstract: It was recently discovered that condensation growing on a nanostructured superhydrophobic surface can spontaneously jump off the surface, triggered by naturally occurring coalescence events. Many reports have observed that droplets must grow to a size of order 10 μm before jumping is enabled upon coalescence; however, it remains unknown how the critical jumping size relates to the topography of the underlying nanostructure. Here, we characterize the dynamic behavior of condensation growing on six different superhydrophobic nanostructures, where the topography of the nanopillars was systematically varied. The critical jumping diameter was observed to be highly dependent upon the height, diameter, and pitch of the nanopillars: tall and slender nanopillars promoted 2 μm jumping droplets, whereas short and stout nanopillars increased the critical size to over 20 μm. The topology of each surface is successfully correlated to the critical jumping diameter by constructing an energetic model that predicts how large a nucleating embryo needs to grow before it can inflate into the air with an apparent contact angle large enough for jumping. By extending our model to consider any possible surface, it is revealed that properly designed nanostructures should enable nanometric jumping droplets, which would further enhance jumping-droplet condensers for heat transfer, antifogging, and antifrosting applications.

146 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the state of the art of laser processing methodologies for the fabrication of bioinspired artificial surfaces to realize extraordinary wetting, optical, mechanical, and biological-active properties for numerous applications is discussed.
Abstract: The exciting properties of micro- and nano-patterned surfaces found in natural species hide a virtually endless potential of technological ideas, opening new opportunities for innovation and exploitation in materials science and engineering. Due to the diversity of biomimetic surface functionalities, inspirations from natural surfaces are interesting for a broad range of applications in engineering, including phenomena of adhesion, friction, wear, lubrication, wetting phenomena, self-cleaning, antifouling, antibacterial phenomena, thermoregulation and optics. Lasers are increasingly proving to be promising tools for the precise and controlled structuring of materials at micro- and nano-scales. When ultrashort-pulsed lasers are used, the optimal interplay between laser and material parameters enables structuring down to the nanometer scale. Besides this, a unique aspect of laser processing technology is the possibility for material modifications at multiple (hierarchical) length scales, leading to the complex biomimetic micro- and nano-scale patterns, while adding a new dimension to structure optimization. This article reviews the current state of the art of laser processing methodologies, which are being used for the fabrication of bioinspired artificial surfaces to realize extraordinary wetting, optical, mechanical, and biological-active properties for numerous applications. The innovative aspect of laser functionalized biomimetic surfaces for a wide variety of current and future applications is particularly demonstrated and discussed. The article concludes with illustrating the wealth of arising possibilities and the number of new laser micro/nano fabrication approaches for obtaining complex high-resolution features, which prescribe a future where control of structures and subsequent functionalities are beyond our current imagination.

125 citations