“…The case of materials based on PDMS with nanoparticles is different from that of pure PDMS materials because nanoparticles possess inherently rough structures that can be directly exploited to fabricate PDMS-based superhydrophobic surfaces. Nanoparticle materials can be classified by morphology into four types: zero-dimensional nanoparticles ( He et al, 2011 ; He et al, 2012 ; Zhao et al, 2015 ; Aslanidou et al, 2016 ; Selim et al, 2018a ; Davis et al, 2018 ; Liu et al, 2018 ; Saharudin et al, 2018 ; Lu et al, 2019 ; Liu et al, 2020b ; Gu et al, 2020 ; Han and Gong, 2021 ; Xiong et al, 2022a ; Rin Yu et al, 2022 ; Yu et al, 2022 ) (such as spherical silicon dioxide (SiO 2 ) ( Aslanidou et al, 2016 ; Yu et al, 2022 ), titanium dioxide (TiO 2 ) ( Liu et al, 2020b ), polypyrrole nanoparticles ( Xiong et al, 2022a ), core-shell spherical composite nanoparticles ( Selim et al, 2018a ), or hollow spherical nanoclusters ( Han and Gong, 2021 )), one-dimensional nanoparticles ( Wang et al, 2019a ; Dai et al, 2019 ; Selim et al, 2019 ; Li et al, 2021 ) (such as linear nanorods ( Selim et al, 2019 ) and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) ( Li et al, 2021 )), two-dimensional nanoparticles ( Wang et al, 2019b ; Saharudin et al, 2019 ; Li and Guo, 2020 ; Cao et al, 2021 ) (such as laminar graphene and its derivatives ( Li and Guo, 2020 ), iron oxide (Fe 3 O 4 ) nanoplates ( Cao et al, 2021 )), and three-dimensional nanoparticles (single material nanoparticles such as tetrapod-shaped zinc oxide (ZnO) ( Yamauchi et al, 2019 ) and flower-like calcium titanium (CaTiO 3 ) structures ( Wang et al, 2007 ), and composite nanoparticles ( Nine et al, 2015 ; Shi et al, 2015 ; Barthwal et al, 2020 ; Zhu et al, 2020 ; Zhang et al, 2021a ; Zhang et al, 2021b ; Wu et al, 2021 ; Selim et al, 2022a ;…”