Geometric effects on retention capacity in liquid-infused surfaces
ORAL
Abstract
The shear-driven drainage of liquid-infused surfaces can be modified by longitudinal variation in the surface's underlying geometry. Because liquid-infused surfaces are playing an increasingly important role in a new generation of drag-reducing and omniphobic materials, the ability to manipulate and optimize their fluid retention capacity is crucial to improving material robustness. Theoretical and numerical calculations are performed on the steady-state fluid retention in streamwise-varying, open-capillary channels, with emphasis on the effect of interfacial deformation on resisting fluid drainage. Optimal substrate geometries and corresponding manufacturing tolerances for the production of efficient surfaces are developed as a function of the parameters accounting for interface deformation and channel geometry.
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Presenters
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Ian Jacobi
Technion, Israel Institute of Technology, Technion
Authors
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Ian Jacobi
Technion, Israel Institute of Technology, Technion
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Lilach Mazor
Technion
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Howard A. Stone
Princeton University, Princeton Univ