Meniscus-Climbing Behavior and Its Minimum Free-Energy
Mechanism
Posted on 2007-10-09 - 00:00
Some insects can climb up the top of the meniscus surface generated by a hydrophilic wall by fixing their posture
without moving their appendages [Baudoin, R. Bull. Biol. Fr. Belg. 1955, 89, 16. Hu, D. L.; Bush, J. W. M. Nature
2005, 437, 733]. To better understand this interesting phenomenon, we did meniscus-climbing experiments of bent
copper sheets. It was found that the sheets do not always climb up the top of the meniscus surface but may stop and
stably stay at various positions on the meniscus surface, depending upon their curvatures and masses, and that bent
copper sheets can self-assemble into an oriented array (or an anisotropic form) through self-rotating on the water
surface. The minimum energy mechanism of meniscus-climbing and self-rotating was then numerically studied. It
was further shown that the meniscus-climbing and the rotating behavior is not only a general phenomenon for floating
objects with hydrophilic surfaces, even those with fairly large sizes and weights (e.g., a metal bottle cap), but is also
conditionally realizable for floating objects with hydrophobic surfaces.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Yu, Y.; Guo, M.; Li, Xide; Zheng, Q.-S. (2016). Meniscus-Climbing Behavior and Its Minimum Free-Energy
Mechanism. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/la700411q