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Anisotropic wetting on simple, flat surfaces

ORAL

Abstract

Anisotropic wetting in nature and in the laboratory is typically associated with complicated chemical or topographical patterning. We show that, surprisingly, even soft, flat surfaces exhibit anisotropic wetting - both in statics and dynamics. Droplets sliding on a soft substrate with 23% stretch move approximately 70% faster parallel to the stretch direction than perpendicular. A stretched substrate with static droplets reveal increasing ellipticity with larger stretches. We connect both of these phenomena to the deformations of the substrate by the droplet along its contact line, the shape of which is strongly dependent on the applied stretch. Here we examine and analyze this deformation with a combination of confocal microscopy and optical profilometry in order to understand the factors that determine the anisotropic wetting behavior and to discuss the cause of the strong stretch-dependence of the anisotropic deformations.

Presenters

  • Katrina Smith-Mannschott

    ETH Zurich

Authors

  • Katrina Smith-Mannschott

    ETH Zurich

  • Qin Xu

    Department of Physics, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

  • Nicolas Bain

    ETH Zurich, Material Sciences, ETH Zürich

  • Stefanie Heyden

    ETH Zurich

  • Eric R Dufresne

    ETH Zurich, Material Sciences, ETH Zürich

  • Robert Style

    ETH Zurich, Material Sciences, ETH Zürich