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New super-hydrophobic metals 'bounce' water

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Press Trust of India London
Last Updated : Jan 22 2015 | 5:55 PM IST
Scientists have used lasers to transform metals into extremely water repellent materials that make droplets bounce off.
Super-hydrophobic materials are desirable for a number of applications such as rust prevention, anti-icing and sanitation. Most current hydrophobic materials rely on chemical coatings.
Scientists at the University of Rochester used a powerful and precise laser-patterning technique that creates an intricate pattern of micro- and nanoscale structures to give the metals their new properties, eliminating the need for temporary coatings.
Chunlei Guo and his colleague at the University's Institute of Optics, Anatoliy Vorobyev, said that using this technique they can create multifunctional surfaces that are not only super-hydrophobic but also highly-absorbent optically.
Guo added that one of the big advantages of his team's process is that "the structures created by our laser on the metals are intrinsically part of the material surface."
This means they won't rub off and it is these patterns that make the metals repel water.

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"The material is so strongly water-repellent, the water actually gets bounced off. Then it lands on the surface again, gets bounced off again, and then it will just roll off from the surface," said Guo, professor of optics in the University's Hajim School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
The materials Guo has created are much more slippery than Teflon - a common hydrophobic material that often coats nonstick frying pans. Unlike Guo's laser-treated metals, the Teflon kitchen tools are not super-hydrophobic.
The difference is that to make water to roll-off a Teflon coated material, you need to tilt the surface to nearly a 70-degree angle before the water begins to slide off.
You can make water roll off the new metals by tilting them less than five degrees, researchers said.
As the water bounces off the super-hydrophobic surfaces, it also collects dust particles and takes them along for the ride. To test this self-cleaning property, Guo and his team took ordinary dust from a vacuum cleaner and dumped it onto the treated surface.
Roughly half of the dust particles were removed with just three drops of water. It took only a dozen drops to leave the surface spotless and it remains completely dry.
Guo is excited by potential applications of super-hydrophobic materials in developing countries.
"In these regions, collecting rain water is vital and using super-hydrophobic materials could increase the efficiency without the need to use large funnels with high-pitched angles to prevent water from sticking to the surface," said Guo.
"A second application could be creating latrines that are cleaner and healthier to use," he said.

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First Published: Jan 22 2015 | 5:55 PM IST

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