Drop trampoline

ORAL

Abstract

Superhydrophobic substrates inspired from the lotus leaf have the ability to reflect impacting water drops. They do so very efficiently and contact lasts typically 10 ms for millimetric droplets. Yet unlike a lotus leaf most synthetic substrates are rigid. Focusing on the interplay between substrate flexibility and liquid repellency might allow us to understand the dynamic properties of natural surfaces. We perform liquid marbles impacts at velocity $V$ onto thin ($\sim$ 0.01 mm) stretched circular PDMS membranes. We obtain contact time reductions of up to 70\%. The bouncing mechanism is drastically modified compared to that on a rigid substrate: the marble leaves the substrate while it is still spread in a disk shape as it is kicked upwards by the membrane. We show that the bouncing is controlled by an interplay between the dynamics of the drop and the membrane.

Authors

  • Pierre Chantelot

    PMMH, UMR 7636 du CNRS, ESPCI, Paris, France & LadHyX, UMR 7646 du CNRS, Ecole polytechnique, Palaiseau, France

  • Martin Coux

    PMMH, UMR 7636 du CNRS, ESPCI, Paris, France & LadHyX, UMR 7646 du CNRS, Ecole polytechnique, Palaiseau, France

  • Christophe Clanet

    LadHyX – Ecole Polytechnique – UMR 7646 du CNRS, CNRS, France, PMMH, UMR 7636 du CNRS, ESPCI, Paris, France & LadHyX, UMR 7646 du CNRS, Ecole polytechnique, Palaiseau, France

  • David Quere

    ESPCI Paris, PMMH, ESPCI, Paris, and LadHyx, Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau, France, ESPCI Paris, Laboratory PMMH, PSL Research University, Sorbonne Universites, Universite Paris Diderot, ESPCI, France, PMMH, UMR 7636 du CNRS, ESPCI, Paris, France & LadHyX, UMR 7646 du CNRS, Ecole polytechnique, Palaiseau, France