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Dan Daniel

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University

ORCID: 0000-0002-5859-170X

Publishes on Surface Modification and Superhydrophobicity, Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions, Fluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer. 69 papers and 2.2k citations.

69Publications
2.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Directional pumping of water and oil microdroplets on slippery surface
Jieke Jiang, Jun Gao, Hengdi Zhang et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2019
Cited by 157Open Access

Transporting water and oil microdroplets is important for applications ranging from water harvesting to biomedical analysis but remains a great challenge. This is due to the amplified contact angle hysteresis and insufficient driving force in the micrometer scale, especially for low-surface energy oil droplets. Coalescence of neighboring droplets, which releases vast additional surface energy, was often required, but its relatively uncontrollable nature brings uncertainties to the droplet motion, and the methodology is not applicable to single droplets. Here we introduce a strategy based on slippery surface with immobilized lubricant menisci to directionally transport microdroplets. By simply mounting hydrogel dots on slippery surface, the raised menisci remotely pump microdroplets via capillary force with high efficiency, regardless of droplet size or surface energy. By proof-of-concept experiments, we demonstrate that our method allows for highly efficient water droplet collection and highly sensitive biomedical analyte detection.

Origins of Extreme Liquid Repellency on Structured, Flat, and Lubricated Hydrophobic Surfaces
Dan Daniel, Jaakko V. I. Timonen, Ruoping Li et al.|Physical Review Letters|2018
Cited by 153Open Access

There are currently three main classes of liquid-repellent surfaces: micro- or nanostructured superhydrophobic surfaces, flat surfaces grafted with "liquidlike" polymer brushes, and lubricated surfaces. Despite recent progress, the mechanistic explanation for the differences in droplet behavior on such surfaces is still under debate. Here, we measure the dissipative force acting on a droplet moving on representatives of these surfaces at different velocities U=0.01-1 mm/s using a cantilever force sensor with submicronewton accuracy and correlate it to the contact line dynamics observed using optical interferometry at high spatial (micron) and temporal (<0.1 s) resolutions. We find that the dissipative force-due to very different physical mechanisms at the contact line-is independent of velocity on superhydrophobic surfaces but depends nonlinearly on velocity for flat and lubricated surfaces. The techniques and insights presented here will inform future work on liquid-repellent surfaces and enable their rational design.