Metal Surface Engineering for Extreme Sustenance of Jumping Droplet Condensation
Abstract
Water vapor condensation on metallic surfaces is critical to a broad range of applications, ranging from power generation to the chemical and pharmaceutical industries. Enhancing simultaneously the heat transfer efficiency, scalability, and durability of a condenser surface remains a persistent challenge. Coalescence-induced condensing droplet jumping is a capillarity-driven mechanism of self-ejection of microscopic condensate droplets from a surface. This mechanism is highly desired due to the fact that it continuously frees up the surface for new condensate to form directly on the surface, enhancing heat transfer without requiring the presence of the gravitational field. However, this condensate ejection mechanism typically requires the fabrication of surface nanotextures coated by an ultrathin (<10 nm) conformal hydrophobic coating (hydrophobic self-assembled monolayers such as silanes), which results in poor durability. Here, we present a scalable approach for the fabrication of a hierarchically structured superhydrophobic surface on aluminum substrates, which is able to withstand adverse conditions characterized by condensation of superheated steam shear flow at pressure and temperature up to approximate to 1.42 bar and approximate to 111 degrees C, respectively, and velocities in the range approximate to 3-9 m/s. The synergetic function of micro- and nanotextures, combined with a chemically grafted, robust ultrathin (approximate to 4.0 nm) poly-1H,1H,2H,2H-perfluorodecyl acrylate (pPFDA) coating, which is 1 order of magnitude thinner than the current state of the art, allows the sustenance of long-term coalescence-induced condensate jumping drop condensation for at least 72 h. This yields unprecedented, up to an order of magnitude higher heat transfer coefficients compared to filmwise condensation under the same conditions and significantly outperforms the current state of the art in terms of both durability and performance establishing a new milestone. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000656443Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
LangmuirVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Amercian Chemical SocietyFunding
801229 - HierARchical Multiscale NanoInterfaces for enhanced Condensation processes (EC)
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