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Daniel, Dan

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Daniel

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Daniel, Dan

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Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication

    Lubricant-infused micro/nano-structured surfaces with tunable dynamic omniphobicity at high temperatures

    (AIP Publishing, 2013) Daniel, Dan; Mankin, Max Nathan; Belisle, Rebecca A.; Wong, Tak-Sing; Aizenberg, Joanna

    Omniphobic surfaces that can repel fluids at temperatures higher than 100 °C are rare. Most state-of-the-art liquid-repellent materials are based on the lotus effect, where a thin air layer is maintained throughout micro/nanotextures leading to high mobility of liquids. However, such behavior eventually fails at elevated temperatures when the surface tension of test liquids decreases significantly. Here, we demonstrate a class of lubricant-infused structured surfaces that can maintain a robust omniphobic state even for low-surface-tension liquids at temperatures up to at least 200 °C. We also demonstrate how liquid mobility on such surfaces can be tuned by a factor of 1000.

  • Publication

    Dynamic polymer systems with self-regulated secretion for the control of surface properties and material healing

    (Nature Publishing Group, 2015) Cui, Jiaxi; Daniel, Dan; Grinthal, Alison; Lin, Kaixiang; Aizenberg, Joanna

    Approaches for regulated fluid secretion, which typically rely on fluid encapsulation and release from a shelled compartment, do not usually allow a fine continuous modulation of secretion, and can be difficult to adapt for monitoring or function-integration purposes. Here, we report self-regulated, self-reporting secretion systems consisting of liquid-storage compartments in a supramolecular polymer-gel matrix with a thin liquid layer on top, and demonstrate that dynamic liquid exchange between the compartments, matrix and surface layer allows repeated, responsive self-lubrication of the surface and cooperative healing of the matrix. Depletion of the surface liquid or local material damage induces secretion of the stored liquid via a dynamic feedback between polymer crosslinking, droplet shrinkage and liquid transport that can be read out through changes in the system’s optical transparency. We foresee diverse applications in fluid delivery, wetting and adhesion control, and material self-repair.