Bio‐Inspired Active Self‐Cleaning Surfaces via Filament‐Like Sweepers Array

Author:

Wu Qingshan1,Yan Hao1,Chen Lie12,Qi Shuanhu1,Zhao Tianyi1,Jiang Lei3,Liu Mingjie145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Bio‐Inspired Smart Interfacial Science and Technology of Ministry of Education School of Chemistry Beihang University Beijing 100191 P. R. China

2. Nerve‐Machine Integration and Cognitive Competition Center Beijing Machine and Equipment institute Beijing 100854 P. R. China

3. CAS Key Laboratory of Bio‐inspired Materials and Interfacial Science CAS Center for Excellence in Nanoscience Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100190 P. R. China

4. Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Biomedical Engineering Beihang University Beijing 100191 P. R. China

5. International Research Institute for Multidisciplinary Science Beihang University Beijing 100191 P. R. China

Abstract

AbstractHydrodynamic forces from moving fluids can be utilized to remove contaminants which is an ideal fouling‐release strategy for underwater surfaces. However, the hydrodynamic forces in the viscous sublayer are greatly reduced owing to the no‐slip condition, which restricts their practical applications. Here, inspired by sweeper tentacles of corals, an active self‐cleaning surface with flexible filament‐like sweepers are reported. The sweepers can penetrate the viscous sublayer by utilizing energy from outer turbulent flows and remove contaminants with adhesion strength of >30 kPa. Under an oscillating flow, the removal rate of the single sweeper can reach up to 99.5% due to dynamic buckling movements. In addition, the sweepers array can completely clean its coverage area within 10 s through coordinated movements as symplectic waves. The active self‐cleaning surface depends on the fluid‐structure coupling between sweepers and flows, which breaks the concept of conventional self‐cleaning.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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