Abstract

In this work, copper surfaces were textured with sub-Terahertz bursts of femtosecond pulses. The wettability of Cu textured surfaces was investigated by measuring the static water contact angle (WCA) as a function of the number of sub-pulses and the intra-burst frequency. A superhydrophobic, antiadhesive response was observed when using bursts with a high number of sub-pulses (equal to or higher than 16) or a high intra-burst frequency (equal to or higher than 0.09 THz). Such trend was ascribed to the generation, under specific laser irradiation conditions, of a double-scale hierarchical texture on the sample surface, formed by sub-micro patterns with fine periodic ripples (LIPSS, Laser-Induced Periodic Surface Structures) and random nanoparticle decoration. Such texture enhances the hydrophobic behavior given by inherent adsorption of adventitious hydrocarbons on laser-processed and thermally-treated metal targets.

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