Where the Drops Used to Be
ORAL
Abstract
Dew drops freezing on a superhydrophobic surface give rise to percolation patterns with dramatically different morphologies from those on a regular surface. They seem to have no memory of the original spatial coordinates of the condensate. In the language of experiments and scaling laws, I will discuss the origin of this curious phenomena: how metastability, capillarity, and hygroscopicity of ice lead to droplet motility, disrupting spatial order, and giving rise to surface-dependent frozen architectures.
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Presenters
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Saurabh Nath
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Authors
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Saurabh Nath
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Ishfaaq Rumjaun
ESPCI
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Hong Li
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Theo Pelletier
ESPCI
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Kripa K Varanasi
Massachusetts Institute of Technology