Capillary Balancing: Designing Frost-Resistant Lubricant-Infused Surfaces

Slippery lubricant-infused surfaces (SLIPS) have shown great promise for anti-frosting and anti-icing. However, small length scales associated with frost dendrites exert immense capillary suction pressure on the lubricant. This pressure depletes the lubricant film and is detrimental to the functiona...

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Published inNano letters Vol. 20; no. 12; pp. 8508 - 8515
Main Authors Wong, William S. Y, Hegner, Katharina I, Donadei, Valentina, Hauer, Lukas, Naga, Abhinav, Vollmer, Doris
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 09.12.2020
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Summary:Slippery lubricant-infused surfaces (SLIPS) have shown great promise for anti-frosting and anti-icing. However, small length scales associated with frost dendrites exert immense capillary suction pressure on the lubricant. This pressure depletes the lubricant film and is detrimental to the functionality of SLIPS. To prevent lubricant depletion, we demonstrate that interstitial spacing in SLIPS needs to be kept below those found in frost dendrites. Densely packed nanoparticles create the optimally sized nanointerstitial features in SLIPS (Nano-SLIPS). The capillary pressure stabilizing the lubricant in Nano-SLIPS balances or exceeds the capillary suction pressure by frost dendrites. We term this concept capillary balancing. Three-dimensional spatial analysis via confocal microscopy reveals that lubricants in optimally structured Nano-SLIPS are not affected throughout condensation (0 °C), extreme frosting (−20 °C to −100 °C), and traverse ice-shearing (−10 °C) tests. These surfaces preserve low ice adhesion (10–30 kPa) over 50 icing cycles, demonstrating a design principle for next-generation anti-icing surfaces.
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This paper was published ASAP on November 9, 2020, with an error in the Figure 1 scale bar. The corrected version was reposted on November 23, 2020.
ISSN:1530-6984
1530-6992
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c02956