posted on 2013-11-27, 00:00authored byJiale Yong, Feng Chen, Qing Yang, Dongshi Zhang, Guangqing Du, Jinhai Si, Feng Yun, Xun Hou
We
present a rapid, facile, and simple method to realize superhydrophobic
patterned polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) surfaces with tunable adhesion
by a femtosecond laser. These surfaces are composed of superhydrophobic
laser-induced structures and hydrophobic unstructured square array.
The femtosecond laser structured domain shows superhydrophobicity
with ultralow water adhesion, while the nonstructured flat PDMS shows
ordinary hydrophobicity with ultrahigh water adhesion. By adjusting
the relative area fraction of laser structured and nonstructured domains,
the as-prepared superhydrophobic surfaces show tunable water adhesion
that ranges from ultralow to ultrahigh, on which the sliding angle
can be controlled from 1° to 90° (a water droplet cannot
slide down even when the as-prepared surface is vertical or turned
upside down). The tunable adhesive superhydrophobic surfaces achieved
by femtosecond laser microfabrication may be potentially used in microfluidic
systems to modulate the mobility of liquid droplets.