Wettability Behaviour of Metal Surfaces after Sequential Nanosecond and Picosecond Laser Texturing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials and Preparation
2.2. Pulsed Laser Surface Processing
2.3. Post-Process Treatment of Samples
2.4. Surface Characterization
3. Results
3.1. Surface Topography
3.2. Long-Term Wettability Behaviour of Ns Laser-Ablated 304SS Surfaces for Different Post-Process Treatments and Conditions
- Wettability transition stage (end of post-process treatment to the 32nd day): During this period, the surface static CA steadily increases, transitioning from hydrophilic to hydrophobic and reaching a peak value of 140° by day 32 (~135° for the control group). In contrast, samples subjected to oven annealing are hydrophobic (CA = 140°) when measured after the treatment, but after which the CA reduces, transitioning to hydrophilic by day 7 and reaching 30° by day 19, then rising to around the CA of the polished (unprocessed) sample group by day 32;
- Wettability ‘rebound’ stage (days 32–42): After reaching its peak, the CA exhibits a rebound effect (decrease in CA): the reduction is around 20° for samples treated with ultrasonic cleaning, compared to an average of 50° for the control group. Meanwhile, the CA for the oven-annealed group briefly dips below the polished sample level, before then rising above it to a peak value of 85°;
- Hydrophobicity stabilization stage (days 42–119): This 77-day period represents the useful hydrophobic “service life” of the samples, during which the CA fluctuates within a certain range but remains hydrophobic throughout. The CA performance of samples treated with ultrasonic cleaning is superior to the other groups, with the CA remaining around 120° ± 10°, compared to the control group value of 100° ± 10°. The oven-annealed group shows the CA fluctuating in the range of 70° ± 10°;
- Hydrophobicity decline stage (days 119–196): During this 77-day period, the CA gradually reduces to values close to 90° for the ultrasonically cleaned group, by which time that of the control group reduces to values less than the 90° transition;
- Hydrophobicity termination stage (days 196–257): This stage marks the complete termination of hydrophobicity without reoccurrence. The CA stabilizes between 80° and 90°, though it is still slightly higher than the polished surface’s contact angle of 74°.
3.3. Wettability Time-Dependent Behaviour of Ns and Ns + Ps Laser Structured Surfaces
3.4. Chemical Composition Time-Dependent Behaviour of Ns and Ns + Ps Laser Structured Surfaces
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Material (Laser Type) | Laser Fluence | Scan Speed (mm/s) | Rep Rate and Pulse Duration (kHz; ns/ps) | Hatch Distance (μm) |
---|---|---|---|---|
304SS (ns) | 12.1 ± 0.5 | 325 | 65; 65 | 50 |
Ti64 (ns) | 7.1 ± 0.1 | 325 | 65; 65 | 50 |
304SS (ps) | 1.20 ± 0.06 | 41.2 | 5; 10 | 20.6 |
Ti64 (ps) | 0.82 ± 0.06 | 55 | 5; 10 | 25 |
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Tang, Y.; Fang, Z.; Fei, Y.; Wang, S.; Perrie, W.; Edwardson, S.; Dearden, G. Wettability Behaviour of Metal Surfaces after Sequential Nanosecond and Picosecond Laser Texturing. Micromachines 2024, 15, 1146. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15091146
Tang Y, Fang Z, Fei Y, Wang S, Perrie W, Edwardson S, Dearden G. Wettability Behaviour of Metal Surfaces after Sequential Nanosecond and Picosecond Laser Texturing. Micromachines. 2024; 15(9):1146. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15091146
Chicago/Turabian StyleTang, Yin, Zheng Fang, Yang Fei, Shuai Wang, Walter Perrie, Stuart Edwardson, and Geoff Dearden. 2024. "Wettability Behaviour of Metal Surfaces after Sequential Nanosecond and Picosecond Laser Texturing" Micromachines 15, no. 9: 1146. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15091146
APA StyleTang, Y., Fang, Z., Fei, Y., Wang, S., Perrie, W., Edwardson, S., & Dearden, G. (2024). Wettability Behaviour of Metal Surfaces after Sequential Nanosecond and Picosecond Laser Texturing. Micromachines, 15(9), 1146. https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15091146