Congratulation to Li Qian for her article “Reversible
structure engineering of bioinspired anisotropic surface for droplet recognition
and transportation” has been published by Advanced Science.
Surfaces with tunable liquid adhesion have
aroused great attention in past years. However, it remains challenging to endow
a surface with the capability of droplet recognition and transportation. Here,
a bioinspired surface, termed as TMAS, is presented that is inspired by
isotropic lotus leaves and anisotropic butterfly wings. The surface is prepared
by simply growing a triangular micropillar array on the pre-stretched thin
poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) film. The regulation of mechanical stress in the
PDMS film allows the fine tuning of structural parameters of the micropillar
array reversibly, which results in the instantaneous, in situ switching between
isotropic and various degrees of anisotropic droplet adhesions, and between
strong adhesion and directional sliding of water droplets. TMAS can thus be
used for robust droplet transportation and recognition of acids, bases, and
their pH strengths. The results here could inspire the design of robust sensor
techniques.
Link: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/advs.202001650