Advanced Materials Interfaces (Dec 2024)
Stable Air Retention under Water on Artificial Salvinia Surfaces Enabled by the Air Spring Effect: The Importance of Geometrical and Surface‐Energy Barriers, and of the Air Spring Height
Abstract
Abstract Superhydrophobic surfaces that can remain dry under water have a high potential as nontoxic antifouling coatings or for drag‐reducing ship coatings. The Salvinia effect leads to impressive stable air layers on underwater submerged floating plants Salvinia, decisively determined by the hydrophilic tips of the otherwise hydrophobic Salvinia hairs (Salvinia paradox). The water adheres to these hydrophilic tips, stabilizing the water–air interface. An even more important contribution to the stability of the air layer is provided by the air spring, which is formed by the air volume bound by the hydrophilic leaf edge and the leaf base. Using an artificial Salvinia model with hydrophobic pillars (syn‐trichomes), how the stability against pressure changes in water depends on the height of the artificial hair is systematically shown: a reduction of the air spring height from 3 mm to 300 µm increases the stability against negative pressure by 500% from 72 to 380 mbar. Thicker air layers react much more strongly when subjected to overpressure (1000 mbar). It is also shown that the presence of a boundary is essential for the function of the air spring: removing the limiting hydrophilic edge around the hydrophobic air spring reduces the stability against negative pressure by 300%.
Keywords