Design of Lubricant Infused Surfaces

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2017 Dec 6;9(48):42383-42392. doi: 10.1021/acsami.7b14311. Epub 2017 Nov 20.

Abstract

Lubricant infused surfaces (LIS) are a recently developed and promising approach to fluid repellency for applications in biology, microfluidics, thermal management, lab-on-a-chip, and beyond. The design of LIS has been explored in past work in terms of surface energies, which need to be determined empirically for each interface in a given system. Here, we developed an approach that predicts a priori whether an arbitrary combination of solid and lubricant will repel a given impinging fluid. This model was validated with experiments performed in our work as well as in literature and was subsequently used to develop a new framework for LIS with distinct design guidelines. Furthermore, insights gained from the model led to the experimental demonstration of LIS using uncoated high-surface-energy solids, thereby eliminating the need for unreliable low-surface-energy coatings and resulting in LIS repelling the lowest surface tension impinging fluid (butane, γ ≈ 13 mN/m) reported to date.

Keywords: bioinspired surfaces; fluid repellency; interfacial phenomena; slippery materials; soft materials; surface energy; surface engineering.