Publication: Predictive Model for Ice Formation on Superhydrophobic Surfaces
Date
2011
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American Chemical Society (ACS)
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Citation
Bahadur, Vaibhav, Lidiya Mishchenko, Benjamin Hatton, J. Ashley Taylor, Joanna Aizenberg, and Tom Krupenkin. 2011. “Predictive Model for Ice Formation on Superhydrophobic Surfaces.” Langmuir 27 (23) (December 6): 14143–14150. doi:10.1021/la200816f.
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Abstract
Prevention and control of ice accumulation has important applications in aviation, building construction and energy conversion devices. One area of active research concerns the use of superhydrophobic surfaces for preventing ice formation. The present work develops a physics-based modeling framework to predict ice formation on cooled superhydrophobic surfaces resulting from impact of supercooled water droplets. This modeling approach analyzes the multiple phenomena influencing ice formation on superhydrophobic surfaces through the development of submodels describing droplet impact dynamics, heat transfer and heterogeneous ice nucleation. These models are then integrated together to achieve a comprehensive understanding of ice formation upon impact of liquid droplets at freezing conditions. The accuracy of this model is validated by its successful prediction of the experimental findings which demonstrate that superhydrophobic surfaces can fully prevent freezing of impacting water droplets down to surface temperatures as low as -20 to -25 °C. The model can be used to study the influence of surface morphology, surface chemistry, and fluid and thermal properties on dynamic ice formation, and identify parameters critical to achieving ice-phobic surfaces. The framework in the present work is the first detailed modeling tool developed for the design and analysis of surfaces for various ice prevention/reduction strategies.
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