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Abstract Over the past two decades, superhydrophobic surfaces that are easily created have aroused considerable attention for their superior performances in various applications at room temperature. Nowadays, there is a growing demand in special fields for the development of surfaces that can resist wetting by high-temperature molten droplets (>1200 °C) using facile design and fabrication strategies. Herein, bioinspired directional structures (BDSs) were prepared on Y 2 O 3 -stabilized ZrO 2 (YSZ) surfaces using femtosecond laser ablation. Benefiting from the anisotropic energy barriers, the BDSs featured with no additional modifiers showed a remarkable increase from 9.2° to 60° in the contact angle of CaO–MgO–Al 2 O 3 –SiO 2 (CMAS) melt and a 70.1% reduction in the spreading area of CMAS at 1250 °C, compared with polished super-CMAS-melt-philic YSZ surfaces. Moreover, the BDSs demonstrated exceptional wetting inhibition even at 1 400 °C, with an increase from 3.3° to 31.3° in contact angle and a 67.9% decrease in spreading area. This work provides valuable insight and a facile preparation strategy for effectively inhibiting the wetting of molten droplets on super-melt-philic surfaces at extremely high temperatures.
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Hujun Wang
Xiuyuan Zhao
Zhengcan Xie
International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing
Central South University
Southwest Jiaotong University
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Wang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6e8a8b6db643587663560 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1088/2631-7990/ad4074
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