Universal droplet propulsion by dynamic surface-charge wetting

Abstract Controllable droplet propulsion on solid surfaces plays a crucial role in various technologies. Many actuating methods have been developed; however, there are still some limitations in terms of the introduction of additives, the versatilities of solid surfaces, and the speed of transportati...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Microsystems & Nanoengineering
Main Authors: Yifan Zhou, Jiayao Wu, Ge Gao, Yubin Zeng, Sheng Liu, Huai Zheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2024-09-01
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41378-024-00745-x
_version_ 1849832724184956928
author Yifan Zhou
Jiayao Wu
Ge Gao
Yubin Zeng
Sheng Liu
Huai Zheng
author_facet Yifan Zhou
Jiayao Wu
Ge Gao
Yubin Zeng
Sheng Liu
Huai Zheng
author_sort Yifan Zhou
collection DOAJ
container_title Microsystems & Nanoengineering
description Abstract Controllable droplet propulsion on solid surfaces plays a crucial role in various technologies. Many actuating methods have been developed; however, there are still some limitations in terms of the introduction of additives, the versatilities of solid surfaces, and the speed of transportation. Herein, we have demonstrated a universal droplet propulsion method based on dynamic surface-charge wetting by depositing oscillating and opposite surface charges on dielectric films with unmodified surfaces. Dynamic surface-charge wetting propels droplets by continuously inducing smaller front contact angles than rear contact angles. This innovative imbalance is built by alternately storing and spreading opposite charges on dielectric films, which results in remarkable electrostatic forces under large gradients and electric fields. The method exhibits excellent droplet manipulation performance characteristics, including high speed (~130 mm/s), high adaptability of droplet volume (1 μL–1 mL), strong handling ability on non-slippery surfaces with large contact angle hysteresis (CAH) (maximum angle of 35°), significant programmability and reconfigurability, and low mass loss. The great application potential of this method has been effectively demonstrated in programmable microreactions, defogging without gravity assistance, and surface cleaning of photovoltaic panels using condensed droplets.
format Article
id doaj-art-756e4d760e8a4bdcb27c8c43234eb550
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2055-7434
language English
publishDate 2024-09-01
publisher Nature Publishing Group
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-756e4d760e8a4bdcb27c8c43234eb5502025-08-20T01:27:44ZengNature Publishing GroupMicrosystems & Nanoengineering2055-74342024-09-0110111010.1038/s41378-024-00745-xUniversal droplet propulsion by dynamic surface-charge wettingYifan Zhou0Jiayao Wu1Ge Gao2Yubin Zeng3Sheng Liu4Huai Zheng5School of Power and Mechanical Engineering, Wuhan UniversityThe Institute of Technological Sciences, Wuhan UniversitySchool of Power and Mechanical Engineering, Wuhan UniversitySchool of Power and Mechanical Engineering, Wuhan UniversitySchool of Power and Mechanical Engineering, Wuhan UniversitySchool of Power and Mechanical Engineering, Wuhan UniversityAbstract Controllable droplet propulsion on solid surfaces plays a crucial role in various technologies. Many actuating methods have been developed; however, there are still some limitations in terms of the introduction of additives, the versatilities of solid surfaces, and the speed of transportation. Herein, we have demonstrated a universal droplet propulsion method based on dynamic surface-charge wetting by depositing oscillating and opposite surface charges on dielectric films with unmodified surfaces. Dynamic surface-charge wetting propels droplets by continuously inducing smaller front contact angles than rear contact angles. This innovative imbalance is built by alternately storing and spreading opposite charges on dielectric films, which results in remarkable electrostatic forces under large gradients and electric fields. The method exhibits excellent droplet manipulation performance characteristics, including high speed (~130 mm/s), high adaptability of droplet volume (1 μL–1 mL), strong handling ability on non-slippery surfaces with large contact angle hysteresis (CAH) (maximum angle of 35°), significant programmability and reconfigurability, and low mass loss. The great application potential of this method has been effectively demonstrated in programmable microreactions, defogging without gravity assistance, and surface cleaning of photovoltaic panels using condensed droplets.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41378-024-00745-x
spellingShingle Yifan Zhou
Jiayao Wu
Ge Gao
Yubin Zeng
Sheng Liu
Huai Zheng
Universal droplet propulsion by dynamic surface-charge wetting
title Universal droplet propulsion by dynamic surface-charge wetting
title_full Universal droplet propulsion by dynamic surface-charge wetting
title_fullStr Universal droplet propulsion by dynamic surface-charge wetting
title_full_unstemmed Universal droplet propulsion by dynamic surface-charge wetting
title_short Universal droplet propulsion by dynamic surface-charge wetting
title_sort universal droplet propulsion by dynamic surface charge wetting
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41378-024-00745-x
work_keys_str_mv AT yifanzhou universaldropletpropulsionbydynamicsurfacechargewetting
AT jiayaowu universaldropletpropulsionbydynamicsurfacechargewetting
AT gegao universaldropletpropulsionbydynamicsurfacechargewetting
AT yubinzeng universaldropletpropulsionbydynamicsurfacechargewetting
AT shengliu universaldropletpropulsionbydynamicsurfacechargewetting
AT huaizheng universaldropletpropulsionbydynamicsurfacechargewetting