“…Superhydrophobic surfaces are widely used in drag reduction, anti-icing, anti-fouling, water manipulation, antibacterial coatings, oil water separation, underwater sensing, and self-cleaning applications. â Such nanostructures are established by creating hierarchical dual-scale roughness on the substrate surface using various techniques such as dip-coating, solâgel synthesis, chemical etching, plasma etching, electrochemical methods, spin-coating, spray-coating, layer-by-layer methods, and chemical vapor deposition. ,â For practical applications, the fabrication method should be scalable, cost-effective, and straightforward. Spray-coating and dip-coating, two popular methods used for fabricating large-area superhydrophobic surfaces, are suitable for substrates with complex features and geometries. â The first technique involves preparing a precursor solution that is sprayed onto the substrate, while the second involves dipping the substrate into the solution. â In these processes, a binder is either spin-coated over the substrate or dissolved in the solution to ensure better adhesion between the coating and the hydrophobic particle .…”