4.6 Article

Adaptive wettability-enhanced surfaces ordered on molded etched substrates using shrink film

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SMART MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
卷 22, 期 1, 页码 -

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IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0964-1726/22/1/014014

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  1. National Institutes of Health through the NIH Director's New Innovator Award Program [1DP2OD007283]

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Superhydrophobic surfaces in nature exhibit desirable properties including self-cleaning, bacterial resistance, and flight efficiency. However, creating such intricate multi-scale features with conventional fabrication approaches is difficult, expensive, and not scalable. By patterning photoresist on pre-stressed shrink-wrap film, which contracts by 95% in surface area when heated, such features over large areas can be obtained easily. Photoresist serves as a dry etch mask to create complex and high-aspect ratio microstructures in the film. Using a double-shrink process, we introduce adaptive wettability-enhanced surfaces ordered on molded etched (AWESOME) substrates. We first create a mask out of the children's toy 'Shrinky-Dinks' by printing dots using a laserjet printer. Heating this thermoplastic sheet causes the printed dots to shrink to a fraction of their original size. We then lithographically transfer the inverse pattern onto photoresist-coated shrink-wrap polyolefin film. The film is then plasma etched. After shrinking, the film serves as a high-aspect ratio mold for polydimethylsiloxane, creating a superhydrophobic surface with water contact angles >150 degrees and sliding angles <10 degrees. We pattern a microarray of 'sticky' spots with a dramatically different sliding angle compared to that of the superhydrophobic region, enabling microtiter-plate type assays without the need for a well plate.

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