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Condensation on Slippery Asymmetric Bumps

TLDR
A conceptually different design approach is presented—based on principles derived from Namib desert beetles, cacti, and pitcher plants—that synergistically combines these aspects of condensation and substantially outperforms other synthetic surfaces.
Abstract
Controlling dropwise condensation is fundamental to water-harvesting systems, desalination, thermal power generation, air conditioning, distillation towers, and numerous other applications. For any of these, it is essential to design surfaces that enable droplets to grow rapidly and to be shed as quickly as possible. However, approaches based on microscale, nanoscale or molecular-scale textures suffer from intrinsic trade-offs that make it difficult to optimize both growth and transport at once. Here we present a conceptually different design approach—based on principles derived from Namib desert beetles, cacti, and pitcher plants—that synergistically combines these aspects of condensation and substantially outperforms other synthetic surfaces. Inspired by an unconventional interpretation of the role of the beetle’s bumpy surface geometry in promoting condensation, and using theoretical modelling, we show how to maximize vapour diffusion fluxat the apex of convex millimetric bumps by optimizing the radius of curvature and cross-sectional shape. Integrating this apex geometry with a widening slope, analogous to cactus spines, directly couples facilitated droplet growth with fast directional transport, by creating a free-energy profile that drives the droplet down the slope before its growth rate can decrease. This coupling is further enhanced by a slippery, pitcher-plant-inspired nanocoating that facilitates feedback between coalescence-driven growth and capillary-driven motion on the way down. Bumps that are rationally designed to integrate these mechanisms are able to grow and transport large droplets even against gravity and overcome the effect of an unfavourable temperature gradient. We further observe an unprecedented sixfold-higher exponent of growth rate, faster onset, higher steady-state turnover rate, and a greater volume of water collected compared to other surfaces. We envision that this fundamental understanding and rational design strategy can be applied to a wide range of water-harvesting and phase-change heat-transfer applications.

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Fog Harvesting Devices Inspired from Single to Multiple Creatures: Current Progress and Future Perspective

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Bioinspired Slippery Surface with Stable Lubricant Impregnation for Efficient Water Harvesting

TL;DR: A highly stable SLIPS with improved lubricant-storage is developed through the structure design of synergistically constructing regular micro-pincushion and nanoparticles and shows great contribution to obviously increased capillary force as well as suppressed lubricant loss during water collection.
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Effects of millimetric geometric features on dropwise condensation under different vapor conditions

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of millimetric surface structures on dropwise condensation heat transfer under two different environments: pure vapor and an air-vapor mixture were investigated, and experimental results showed that, although convex structures enable faster droplet growth in an air vapor mixture, the same structures impose the opposite effect during pure vapor condensation, hindering droplet expansion.
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Critical size ratio for coalescence-induced droplet jumping on superhydrophobic surfaces

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of the initial droplet size ratio on coalescence-induced jumping of two water droplets is investigated experimentally and numerically, and the results agree well with the experimental data as the size ratios of observed jumping events collapse into the predicted jumping regime.
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Passive Antifrosting Surfaces Using Microscopic Ice Patterns.

TL;DR: Up to 90% of a surface can exhibit passive antifrosting by using chemical or physical wettability patterns to template "ice stripes" across the surface, which siphon the supersaturated water vapor to keep the intermediate surface areas dry from dew and frost.
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Biomimetic Fabrication of Janus Fabric with Asymmetric Wettability for Water Purification and Hydrophobic/Hydrophilic Patterned Surfaces for Fog Harvesting.

TL;DR: A facile method to prepare Janus fabrics with asymmetric wettability for on-demand oil/water separation and hydrophobic/hydrophilic patterned fabrics for efficient fog harvesting shows great potential in the filtration of purification of oily sewage and the efficient condensed collection of water.