Femtosecond Laser Regulated Ultrafast Growth of Mushroom-Like Architecture for Oil Repellency and Manipulation.

2021 
Natural organisms can create various microstructures via a spontaneous growth mode. In contrast, artificial protruding microstructures are constructed by subtractive methods that waste materials and time or by additive methods that require additional materials. Here, we report a facile and straightforward strategy for a laser-induced self-growing mushroom-like microstructure on a flat surface. By simply controlling the localized femtosecond laser heating and ablation on the poly(ethylene terephthalate) tape/heat-shrinkable polystyrene bilayer surface, it is discovered that a mushroom-like architecture can spontaneously and rapidly grow out from the original surface within 0.36 s. The dimension of the re-entrant micropillar array (cap diameter, pillar spacing, and height) can be accurately controlled through the intentional control of laser scanning. Followed by a fluorination and spray coating, the obtained surface can realize the repellency and manipulation of oil droplets. This work provides new opportunities in the fields of microfabrication, microfluidics, microreactor engineering, and wearable antifouling electronics.
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