Abstract

The present paper aims to study the influence of pore-scale fiber structure on the Cassie-Baxter contact angle of droplets on PTFE fibrous hydrophobic membranes. The fiber structure is obtained by the Confocal Laser Scanning Microscope (CLSM), and an optical test bench is built to measure the Cassie-Baxter contact angles of a droplet on a PTFE membrane. The free energy of the solid-liquid interface is measured by the surface tension integral on the droplet profile. An iterative algorithm for liquid-vapor interface shrinking is brought forward to analyze the liquid-vapor interface area between the droplet and the membrane, and the interface parameters of the Cassie-Baxter model are recognized. The experiment shows that the Cassie-Baxter contact angles and the contact line radii along the droplet circumference are in a normal distribution due to random fiber structures, and the variance of the normal distribution increases with the membrane pore diameter. The normal distribution of Cassie-Baxter’s contact angle indicates the constraint of the solid-liquid interface to the liquid-vapor interface. On the same normal contact pressure condition, the liquid-vapor area ratio of the droplet and membrane interface changes little, and Cassie-Baxter’s contact angle increases with the solid-liquid interface area ratio.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call