Abstract

A femtosecond laser was used to create microstructures on very pure metal surfaces. The irradiated samples initially showed super-hydrophilic behavior. With time and exposure to ambient air the contact angle increased to about 160° with very low hysteresis. The surfaces supported the Cassie and Wenzel wetting states, depending on the technique used to deposit the water droplets. The created surface morphologies were idealized with a geometric model that is an assembly of densely packed cylindrical pillars with semispherical caps. Using this geometric model for calculation of the surface roughness, a theoretical Young contact angle of about 99° was calculated for all samples from the Wenzel and Cassie–Baxter equations. While the value of 99° significantly differs from the measured hydrophilic contact angles on the polished pure metallic samples, it indicates that a laser-induced surface reaction must be responsible for the evolution of contact angles to super-hydrophobic ones and that this phenomenon is independent of the type of metal.

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