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J Colloid Interface Sci ; 674: 178-185, 2024 Nov 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38925063

RESUMEN

HYPOTHESIS: The petal effect is a well-known natural phenomenon in surface science and has served as inspiration for the creation of several materials with superhydrophobic qualities and high adhesion. As surface roughness has a crucial role in these properties, being able to modulate it could help us design materials at will. Capillary penetration frustrates diffusion and promotes large contact angles as well as high adhesion. EXPERIMENTS: Polystyrene surfaces were created using the spin-coating technique. By varying the polymer concentration, the surface roughness was modified. To determine the roughness parameters, atomic force microscopy was used. We recorded advancing and receding contact angles using water and glycerol as test liquids to study contact angle hysteresis, the work of adhesion and the apparent surface energy, which was determined with the Chibowski and Perea-Carpio method. For the purpose of elucidating the wetting states, captive bubble experiments were conducted. FINDINGS: Using an easy method, we create polystyrene surfaces with both superhydrophobicity and strong adhesion, where the roughness area factor regulates wetting transitions from Cassie-Baxter to Wenzel. The receding contact angle suggests capillary penetration, which we demonstrate by captive bubble experiments. In addition, a link was found between the surface roughness and apparent surface energy.

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