Manufacturing hydrophobic surfaces on aluminium substrates by micro-milling with end-ball nose tools
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Guerrero Vaca, Guillermo Rafael; Fusco, Schon; Rodríguez Valverde, Miguel Ángel; Rodríguez-Alabanda, ÓscarEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Micromilling Hydrophobicity Surface texture
Fecha
2024-06-07Referencia bibliográfica
Guerrero Vacas, G. et. al. 124 (2024) 24–37. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmapro.2024.05.086]
Patrocinador
Project PID2020-116082GB-I00 supported by the State Research Agency (SRA) of Spain (MCIN/AEI/10.130 39/501100011033); Marie Skłodowska- Curie Innovative Training Network-grant agreement nr. 955612 (NanoPaInt); University of C´ordoba/ CBUAResumen
In industrial sectors such as automotive, aeronautics or medical, among others, anticorrosive, antibacterial, selfcleaning,
and anti-sticking surfaces are demanded. Thus, the production of these surfaces by scalable processes is
currently a subject of intense research but the processes are often complex, slow and use expensive and harmful
chemical reagents. In this work, the micro-milling technique with ball nose tools has been proposed as a scalable
and environmentally friendly way to improve water repellency on surfaces processed in a 5000 series aluminium
and then treated with a hydrophobic coating. Thus, a novel arch-pyramidal protrusion-based surface texture
generated by milling has been optimized by means of an experimental set up according to Taguchi's method,
evaluating the influence of the process variables on surface hysteresis and hydrophobic capacity of the processed
surfaces by means of static, sliding, advancement and receding angle measurements. Classical wettability models
have made it possible to define hydrophobic specimens and the appropriate relationships between the water
droplet size (d) and the radial milling step (p) have been identified to obtain the better hydrophobic behaviour.
So, textures with lower values of crest height (h) and lower roughness factor (r) have shown better hydrophobicity
for bigger water droplets of 50–100 μl and when the ratio d/p is higher. After undergoing over 60 cycles of
a peel wear test standardized according to ASTM D 3359-09, the micromilled hydrophobic surfaces exhibit
sustained hydrophobic properties, with sliding angles slightly increasing but stabilizing around 11◦, indicative of
preserved hydrophobicity.