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Effect of geometrical parameters on rebound of impacting droplets on leaky superhydrophobic meshes

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TLDR
This study has studied the effect of different geometrical parameters of superhydrophobic copper meshes on different modes of droplet rebound, and observes that for flexible meshes, the transition to pancake type bouncing is induced at lower Weber numbers.
Abstract
When a droplet impacts a superhydrophobic sieve, a part of the droplet penetrates through it when the dynamic pressure (ρU2) of the impinging droplet exceeds the breakthrough pressure (γΓ/A). At higher impact velocities, the ejected-jet breaks and separates from the main droplet. The remaining part of the droplet bounces off the surface showing different modes (normal bouncing as a vertically elongated drop or pancake bouncing). In this work, we have studied the effect of different geometrical parameters of superhydrophobic copper meshes on different modes of droplet rebound. We observe three different effects in our study. Firstly, we observe pancake like bouncing, which is attributed to the capillary energy of the rebounding interface formed after the breaking of the ejected-jet. Secondly, we observe leakage of the droplet volume and kinetic energy due to the breaking of the ejected-jet, which leads to reduction in the contact times. Finally, we observe that for flexible meshes, the transition to pancake type bouncing is induced at lower Weber numbers. Flexibility also leads to a reduction in the volume loss from the ejected-jet. This study will be helpful in the design of superhydrophobic meshes for use under impact scenarios.

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Citations
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Dynamic and Quasi-static Droplet Penetration through Meshes.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigate the effects of pore size, surface wettability, and penetration mode on the characteristics of liquid penetration through meshes, and find that surface-wettability has a negligible effect on either the threshold speed of the droplet penetration or the penetrating liquid mass.
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Drop impact on substrates with heterogeneous stiffness

TL;DR: This study generalizes the understanding of drop impact research beyond uniform substrates, reveals the potential of using stiffness-patterned substrates to control splash, and may find useful applications in industries related to drop impact and splash.
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Review on the performances and applications of mesh-fabrics

TL;DR: In this article , the authors introduced the classifications and preparation processes of mesh-fabrics, and the mechanical properties under various load conditions were described, and different methods of structural and numerical simulations were reviewed.
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Droplet impact on a wettability‐patterned woven mesh

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors presented high-resolution simulation results of mm-size droplets striking wettability-patterned meshes with the goal of replicating prior physical experiments, identifying sensitivities to the initial conditions and wetability of the mesh wires, and studying the fluid-field dynamics when droplets strike such meshes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

NIH Image to ImageJ: 25 years of image analysis

TL;DR: The origins, challenges and solutions of NIH Image and ImageJ software are discussed, and how their history can serve to advise and inform other software projects.
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Purity of the sacred lotus, or escape from contamination in biological surfaces

TL;DR: It is shown here for the first time that the interdependence between surface roughness, reduced particle adhesion and water repellency is the keystone in the self-cleaning mechanism of many biological surfaces.
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Designing Superoleophobic Surfaces

TL;DR: It is shown how a third factor, re-entrant surface curvature, in conjunction with chemical composition and roughened texture, can be used to design surfaces that display extreme resistance to wetting from a number of liquids with low surface tension, including alkanes such as decane and octane.
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Self-cleaning surfaces - virtual realities

Ralf Blossey
- 01 May 2003 - 
TL;DR: Key advances in the understanding and fabrication of surfaces with controlled wetting properties are about to make the dream of a contamination-free (or 'no-clean') surface come true.
Journal ArticleDOI

Drop Impact Dynamics: Splashing, Spreading, Receding, Bouncing ...

TL;DR: In this article, a review deals with drop impacts on thin liquid layers and dry surfaces, referred to as splashing, and their propagation is discussed in detail, as well as some additional kindred, albeit nonsplashing, phenomena like drop spreading and deposition, receding (recoil), jetting, fingering, and rebound.
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