2019
DOI: 10.1002/admt.201900727
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Cactus‐Inspired Conical Spines with Oriented Microbarbs for Efficient Fog Harvesting

Abstract: and joints can efficiently transport and collect water from moisture. [4] The tenebrionid beetle with hydrophilic/hydrophobic patterned structures can collect drinking water from foggy air. [5] Many Cactaceae species living in highly arid deserts are extremely drought-tolerant owing to their excellent fog harvesting ability and minimal water loss. [6] Cacti uses conical spines with oriented microbarbs and hydrophilic trichomes as a continuous and effective fog harvesting system that relies on the cooperation… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…The complex and directional structure of microbarbs restricts the manufacturing of conical materials. Yi et al [87] used magnetorheological drawing lithography (MRDL) method to fabricate conical materials with different orienting microspines on a superhydrophilic porous substrate (Figure 3e-g). The strategy of a conical material with backward barbs can significantly speed up the directional transport of water droplets and achieve higher fog collection efficiency.…”
Section: Conical Fog Collection Materials Inspired By Cactus Spinesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The complex and directional structure of microbarbs restricts the manufacturing of conical materials. Yi et al [87] used magnetorheological drawing lithography (MRDL) method to fabricate conical materials with different orienting microspines on a superhydrophilic porous substrate (Figure 3e-g). The strategy of a conical material with backward barbs can significantly speed up the directional transport of water droplets and achieve higher fog collection efficiency.…”
Section: Conical Fog Collection Materials Inspired By Cactus Spinesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…e,f) Reproduced with permission. [87] Copyright 2019, Wiley-VCH. Scale bars (e) 1 mm, (f) 1 mm, (g) 1 mm.…”
Section: Conical Fog Collection Materials Inspired By Cactus Spinesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In order to achieve the same water collection function, scientists have prepared a series of cactus-inspired conical structures. [71][72][73] Cao et al 74 have developed an improved organic solvent-free magnetic particle-assisted molding (MPAM) technology that can mass produce cactus-like microtips in a short period of time. The array of hydrophobic conical tips composed of PDMS and MP, together with the hydrophilic cotton fabric, constitutes a mist collection system.…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another issue is that the expected wetting properties heavily rely on specific surface morphologies. No matter biomimetic structures (Mele et al, 2012;Barthlott et al, 2010;Schulte et al, 2011;Yi et al, 2019;Kuru et al, 2011;Gao et al, 2005), anisotropic sliding surfaces (Kang et al, 2013;Wu et al, 2011;Zhang et al, 2014), or hierarchical architectures (Yan et al, 2020;Chen et al, 2007;Rykaczewski et al, 2013), they require relatively complicated fabrication steps involving lithography or chemical synthesis, which is challenging for large-area production and seriously restricts their applications.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%