Wettability Transition of a Liquid Droplet on Solid Surface With Nanoscale Inverted Triangular Grooves

Author(s):  
Meiling Cai ◽  
Yuxiu Li ◽  
Ying Chen ◽  
Jinliang Xu ◽  
Longyan Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract Inspired by a few phenomena in nature such as the lotus leaf, red rose petal, gecko’s feet and Nepenthes Alata plant, much attention has been paid to use simple and feasible means to achieve remarkable wetting behaviour for many applications in various areas including self-cleaning for building exteriors and windshields, oil/water separation, anti-icing, liquid collecting, anti-fogging and anti-corrosion. Based on the established theoretical models, wetting behaviour of a liquid droplet obtained by molecular dynamics simulation method is generally in good agreement with the experimental results. In macro and micro scale, the previous theories can explain and predict the wetting behaviors well. However, these theories are invalid for nanoscale. It is essential to reveal the underlying physical mechanism of the wetting behaviors of the droplet on solid surface with nanoroughness. Extensive studies on nanosale wettability focus on the effect of nano structures on wettability state. Desired wetting behavior of rough material surface achieved by nanosize reentrant geometry like “T” or mushroom shape and other variant geometry with solid overhangs has been widely used in self-cleaning surfaces, heat exchange and many applications. For example, “T” shape groove with different depths and widths under nanoscale has been considered to confer superhydrophobicity to hydrophilic surfaces gradually. In this paper, wettability transition of a liquid droplet on geometrically heterogeneous solid substrate with nanoscale structures of inverted triangular grooves is investigated by using molecular dynamics simulation method under the parameter space spanned by structure geometry and solid-liquid molecular interaction potential strength. Three wettability states, namely Cassie nonwetting state, Cassie-to-Wenzel transition state and Wenzel wetting state, are identified with various geometries and potential strength. For Cassie nonwetting state, increasing height of the triangles has less effect on wettability transition with weak solid-liquid molecular interaction. Besides, the Cassie nonwetting state is less sensitive to different interval between the triangles as solid-liquid molecular interaction is weak. For Cassie-to-Wenzel transition state, increasing height of the triangles and decreasing interval between the triangles decrease wettability. For Wenzel wetting state, increasing interval between the triangles with low height increases wettability. With strong solid-liquid molecular interaction, different interval between the triangles results in wetting state transition from Wenzel to transition state. What’s more, liquid droplet changes its state from Wenzel wetting state to Cassie-to-Wenzel transition state with increasing height of the triangles or decreasing interval between the triangles. Three wettability transition regions are identified in the parameter space.

1999 ◽  
Vol 110 (8) ◽  
pp. 3736-3747 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor S. Batista ◽  
Martin T. Zanni ◽  
B. Jefferys Greenblatt ◽  
Daniel M. Neumark ◽  
William H. Miller

2019 ◽  
Vol 97 (8) ◽  
pp. 869-874
Author(s):  
Xue-Qing Chen ◽  
Lei Tong

In this paper, mesoscopic lattice–Boltzmann method (LBM) and microscopic molecular dynamics simulation method were used to simulate droplet dynamic wetting under microgravity. In terms of LBM, the wetting process of a droplet on a solid wall surface was simulated by introducing the fluid–fluid and solid–fluid interactions. In terms of molecular dynamics simulation, the spreading process of water on gold surface was simulated. Calculation results showed that two kinds of calculation methods were based on the microscopic molecular theory or mesoscopic kinetics theory, and such models could effectively overcome the contact line paradox issue, which results from the macro-continuum assumption and non-slip boundary condition assumption. The spreading exhibits two-stage behavior: fast spreading and slow spreading stages. For the two simulation methods, the ratio of fast spreading stage duration to slow spreading duration, spreading capacity (equilibrium contact radius/initial radius), and the spreading exponent of the rapid stage were very close. However, the predictive spreading index of the slow spreading stage was different, owing to the different spreading mechanisms between meso- and nanoscales.


1989 ◽  
Vol 159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cliff F. Richardson ◽  
Paulette Clancy

ABSTRACTThe ultra-rapid melting and subsequent resolidification of Embedded Atom Method models of the fcc metals copper and gold are followed using a Non-Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics computer simulation method. Results for the resolidification of an exposed (100) face of copper at room temperature are in good agreement with recent experiments using a picosecond laser. At T = 0.5 Tm, the morphology of the solid/liquid interface is shown to be similar to a Lennard-Jones model. The morphology of the crystal-vapor interface at 92% of Tm shows a significant disordering of the topmost layers. Difficulties with the EAM model for gold are observed. Comparison of the Baskes et al. and Oh and Johnson embedding functions are discussed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 148 (21) ◽  
pp. 214705 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. I. Mendelev ◽  
F. Zhang ◽  
H. Song ◽  
Y. Sun ◽  
C. Z. Wang ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 02008
Author(s):  
Igor Neelov ◽  
Valerii Bezrodnyi ◽  
Anna Marchenko ◽  
Emil Fatullaev ◽  
Sofia Miktaniuk

Lysine dendrimers and dendrigrafts are often used in biomedicine for drug and gene delivery to different target organs or cells. In present paper the possibility of complex formation by lysine dendrigraft and 16 molecules of therapeutic KED peptide was investigated using molecular dynamics simulation method. A system containing of one dendrigraftt and 16 KED peptides in water were studied. It was shown that stable complex consisting of the dendrigraft and the peptide molecules formed and structure of this complex was studied. Similar complexes could be used in future for delivery of other therapeutic peptides to target organs.


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