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Micro-scale flow on naturally occurring and engineered functional surfaces
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Abstract
The deposition and controlled flow of continuous thin
liquid film droplets on surfaces containing complex microscale
surface patterning (either man-made or naturally
occurring) plays a key part in numerous engineering and
biologically related fields. For example, in an engineering
context, complex surface patterning is present in processes
involving printing/photolithography [1] and the application
of precision protective coatings [2]; in biological systems
they occur in such diverse areas as plant disease control [3],
in redistribution of lung linings in respiratory systems [4],
and in sustaining life itself, as in the unusual case of the
Namibian desert beetle which drinks by harvesting morning mists [5] -- the mist condenses on hydrophilic
bumps on its upper surface to form larger droplets which
then roll down waxy hydrophobic channels between the
bumps to reach the beetle's mouth