4.4 Article

High- and low-adhesive superhydrophobicity on the liquid flame spray-coated board and paper: structural effects on surface wetting and transition between the low- and high-adhesive states

Journal

COLLOID AND POLYMER SCIENCE
Volume 291, Issue 2, Pages 447-455

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00396-012-2833-5

Keywords

Superhydrophobic; Wetting; Hierarchical roughness; Contact angle hysteresis; Paper; Roll-to-roll process

Funding

  1. Tekes (Finnish Funding Agency for Technology and Innovation)

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Surface wetting is an important and relevant phenomenon in several different fields. Scientists have introduced a large number of applications where special surface wetting could be exploited. Here, we study wetting phenomena on high- and low-adhesive superhydrophobic liquid flame spray (LFS)-generated TiO2 coatings on paper and pigment-coated board substrates using water-ethanol solution as a probe liquid. Submicrometer-scale air gaps, which exist on superhydrophobic surfaces below the liquid droplets, were more stable with the ethanol increment than the larger-scale micrometric air gaps. With the droplet ethanol concentration of 15 wt%, static contact angle as high as 155 +/- 2A degrees was measured on the LFS-TiO2-coated board. Transition from the low-adhesive wetting state to the high-adhesive state was demonstrated on the LFS-TiO2-coated paper. The LFS method enables efficient roll-to-roll production of surfaces with special wetting properties on economically viable board and paper substrate materials.

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