화학공학소재연구정보센터
Langmuir, Vol.26, No.4, 2700-2706, 2010
Tailoring Anisotropic Wetting Properties on Submicrometer-Scale Periodic Grooved Surfaces
The use of simple plasma treatments and polymer deposition to tailor the anisotropic wetting properties of one-dimensional (1D) submicrometer-scale grooved surfaces, fabricated using interferometric lithography in photoresist polymer films, is reported. Strongly anisotropic wetting phenomena are observed for as-prepared 1D grooved Surfaces for both positive and negative photoresists. Low-pressure plasma treatments with different gas compositions (e.g., CHF3, CF4, O-2) are employed to tailor the anisotropic wetting properties from strongly anisotropic and hydrophobic to hydrophobic with very high contact angle and superhydrophilic with a smaller degree of wetting anisotropy and without changing the structural anisotropy. The change of the surface wetting properties for these 1D patterned surfaces is attributed to a change in surface chemical composition, monitored using XPS. In addition, the initial anisotropic wetting properties on 1D patterned samples Could be modified by coating plasma treated samples with a thin layer of polymer. We also demonstrated that the wetting properties of 1D grooved surfaces in a Si substrate Could be tuned with similar plasma treatments. The ability to tailor anisotropic wetting oil 1D patterned Surfaces will find many applications in microfluidic devices, lab-on-a-chip systems, microreactors, and self-cleaning surfaces.