“…The ability of surfaces to efficiently drain water has become an area of significant interest due to their various applications in self-cleaning, 1,2 anti-fogging, 3,4 anti-icing, 5,6 heat transfer enhancement, 7 anti-splash, 8–11 creatural survival, 12–15 signal transmission 16 and liquid-based material manipulation. 17 Previous studies have focused on designing surfaces that increase driving forces 1,12,18–22 or reduce resistant forces 14,23–25 to achieve fast water removal or drainage. For instance, structures with larger asymmetry forces 12,18 or surfaces with wettability gradients 1,19,20 enhance the speed of water removal, superhydrophilic microwicks exploit stable liquid films to drain water rapidly by minimizing pinning forces, 14 and superhydrophobic needle nozzles help reduce the air–liquid–solid triple contact line, enabling faster and more precise dispensing of smaller droplets.…”