Super water-repellent surfaces showing a contact angle of 174° for water droplets have been made of alkylketene dimer (AKD). Water droplets roll around without attachment on the super water-repellent surfaces when tilted slightly. The AKD is a kind of wax and forms spontaneously a fractal structure in its surfaces by solidification from the melt. The fractal surfaces of AKD repel a water droplet completely and show a contact angle larger than 170° without any fluorination treatments. Theoretical prediction of the wettability of the fractal surfaces has been given in the previous paper. The relationship between the contact angle of the flat surface θ and that of the fractal surface θf is expressed by the equation cos θf = (L/l) D -2 cos θ where (L/l) D -2 is the surface area magnification factor. The fractal dimension of the solid AKD surface was determined to be D ≈ 2.3 applying the box-counting method to the SEM images of the AKD cross section. L and l, which are the largest and the smallest size limits of the fractal behavior of the surface, are also estimated from the box-counting method. The contact angles of some water/1,4-dioxane mixtures on the fractal and the flat AKD surfaces were determined, and the values of cos θf were plotted against cos θ. The plot of cos θf against cos θ agrees well with the theoretical prediction. It has been demonstrated by this work that the fractal concept is a powerful tool to develop some novel functional materials.
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