Captive bubbles on a superhydrophobic (SH) surface have been shown to increase in volume via injection of air through the surrounding plastron. The experimental contact diameter against volume trends were found to follow that predicted by the Surface Evolver simulation generally but corresponded with the simulated data at contact angle (CA) = 158° when the volume was 20 μL but that at CA = 170° when the volume was increased to 180 μL. In this regime, there was a simultaneous outward movement of the contact line as well as a small reduction in the slope that the liquid-air interface makes with the horizontal as air was injected. At volumes higher than 180 μL, air injection caused the diameter to reduce progressively until detachment. The inward movement of the contact line in this regime allowed the bubble body to undergo shape deformations to stay attached onto the substrate with larger volumes (300 μL) than predicted (220 μL at CA = 170°) using simulation. In experiments to investigate the effect of translating the SH surface, movement of captive bubbles was possible with 280 μL volume but not with 80 μL volume. This pointed to the possibility of transporting gas-phase samples on SH surfaces using larger captive bubble volumes.
The adhesion forces of liquid drops on superhydrophobic surfaces are typically in the nano-Newton range which presents problems in their dispensation from pipettes. Furthermore, since the liquid adheres more strongly to the pipette tip, some portion of the liquid will tend to remain on the tip, causing inaccuracy in the volume dispensed. We advance a novel approach here, in which the spray from an acoustic nebulizer is sent to a superhydrophobic receptacle and the volume ascertained precisely using a weighing scale. The superhydrophobic surface was identified to develop via a galvanic displacement mechanism in an electroless deposition process. A time dependent morphology change from granular to dendritic with longer immersion into the silver nitrate solution was found which indicated that granular growth beyond a certain size was not feasible, although granular structures were more preferentially formed just after nucleation. The dendritic structure formation was likely due to the natural tendency of the process to maintain or increase the surface area to volume ratio in order not to limit the rate of deposition. An immersion for at least 7 seconds into the silver nitrate solution, when the granular structures were predominant, was all that was needed to ensure superhydrophobicity of the surfaces. Also, the superhydrophobic state required not just significant numbers of the granular structures to be present but also interrupted coverage on the surface. On using the technique, a single drop was created by subsequently covering the receptacle with a lid and shaking it gently. The volume dispensed was found to vary linearly with the operation time of the nebulizer. We elucidated the observed increased ability of drops to reside on inclines using wetting mechanics and presented an elementary mathematical description of the extent of aerosol coverage on the surface, which has implications for the mechanics of aerosol growth into drops. The structural changes in enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) observed after acoustic dispensation necessitated all samples in a fluorimetric assay to involve equal nebulized volumes of the fluorescent protein marker for measurement consistency.
Superhydrophobic surfaces aid biochemical analysis by limiting sample loss. A system based on wells here tolerated tilting up to 20° and allowed air logic transfer with evidence of mixing. Conditions for intact transfer on 15 to 60 μL drops using compressed air pressure operation were also mapped.
Evaporative pre-concentration is energy conserving and benefits from minimal intervention in environmental monitoring for sustainability.Drops of specific volume falling cleanly through the superhydrophobic hole method here are found to work on woven mesh (wire diameter ¼ 57 mm, pitch ¼ 125 mm) but not on plate substrates. Their conception as solid spheres was not borne out in volume to hole diameter trends, and they can also be retained on the substrate despite high levels of inclination.
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