Authors
Tuukka Verho, Juuso T Korhonen, Lauri Sainiemi, Ville Jokinen, Chris Bower, Kristian Franze, Sami Franssila, Piers Andrew, Olli Ikkala, Robin HA Ras
Publication date
2012/6/26
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
109
Issue
26
Pages
10210-10213
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Nature offers exciting examples for functional wetting properties based on superhydrophobicity, such as the self-cleaning surfaces on plant leaves and trapped air on immersed insect surfaces allowing underwater breathing. They inspire biomimetic approaches in science and technology. Superhydrophobicity relies on the Cassie wetting state where air is trapped within the surface topography. Pressure can trigger an irreversible transition from the Cassie state to the Wenzel state with no trapped air—this transition is usually detrimental for nonwetting functionality and is to be avoided. Here we present a new type of reversible, localized and instantaneous transition between two Cassie wetting states, enabled by two-level (dual-scale) topography of a superhydrophobic surface, that allows writing, erasing, rewriting and storing of optically displayed information in plastrons related to different length scales.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
T Verho, JT Korhonen, L Sainiemi, V Jokinen, C Bower… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012