Ellipsoidal
Colloids with a Controlled Surface Roughness
via Bioinspired Surface Engineering: Building Blocks for Liquid Marbles
and Superhydrophobic Surfaces
posted on 2017-02-09, 00:00authored byPengjiao Zhang, Lu Yang, Qiang Li, Songhai Wu, Shaoyi Jia, Zhanyong Li, Zhenkun Zhang, Linqi Shi
Understanding the important role
of the surface roughness of nano/colloidal
particles and harnessing them for practical applications need novel
strategies to control the particles’ surface topology. Although
there are many examples of spherical particles with a specific surface
roughness, nonspherical ones with similar surface features are rare.
The current work reports a one-step, straightforward, and bioinspired
surface engineering strategy to prepare ellipsoidal particles with
a controlled surface roughness. By manipulating the unique chemistry
inherent to the oxidation-induced self-polymerization of dopamine
into polydopamine (PDA), PDA coating of polymeric ellipsoids leads
to a library of hybrid ellipsoidal particles (PS@PDA) with a surface
that decorates with nanoscale PDA protrusions of various densities
and sizes. Together with the advantages originated from the anisotropy
of ellipsoids and rich chemistry of PDA, such a surface feature endows
these particles with some unique properties. Evaporative drying of
fluorinated PS@PDA particles produces a homogeneous coating with superhydrophobicity
that arises from the two-scale hierarchal structure of microscale
interparticle packing and nanoscale roughness of the constituent ellipsoids.
Instead of water repelling that occurs for most of the lotus leaf-like
superhydrophobic surfaces, such coating exhibits strong water adhesion
that is observed with certain species of rose pedals. In addition,
the as-prepared hybrid ellipsoids are very efficient in preparing
liquid marble-isolated droplets covered with solid particles. Such
liquid marbles can be placed onto many surfaces and might be useful
for the controllable transport and manipulation of small volumes of
liquids.