Abstract

Kingfishers stand on a branch, and raindrops tumble translationally from feathers during raining, enlightening functional surfaces design and liquid transport control. Far-ranging studies on oriented transportation are confined to vertical impacting, which is, to date, in-depth philosophy of horizontal droplets transport on motionless surface deems to be rather serviceable. This study, employed mixed-wettability surface inspired by kingfishers’ feather, occurs on directional transportation issues, such as the synergies of wettability-controlled, driving force and transportation capability. Here we conduct both experimental testing and CFD-aided numerical modelling to reproduce the asymmetric bouncing and directional transport phenomena. We found that the anisotropic surface manipulates to convert normally vertical impacting to horizontal droplets transport. Law of the thrown droplet, on the other hand, is predominated by the wettability-controlled surface, while the coexistence of contact angle difference and surface offset location cooperatively dictates the intensity and patterns of the thrown droplet. Of all these factors, the post-optimized surfaces are designed first and then the regime map of transportation pattern is elaborated. Results manifest that the elements induce the maximum horizontal transport distance by up to 6.2D0, and first desorption time is only 7.8 ms. The findings shed light on engineering design principles that can pave the way for novel applications in anti-icing, lubrication, and spray cooling.

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