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Thermo-Electrohydrodynamic Patterning in Nanofilms.

Hadi Nazaripoor1, Charles R Koch1, Mohtada Sadrzadeh1

  • 1Department of Mechanical Engineering, 10-232 Donadeo Innovation Center for Engineering, University of Alberta , Edmonton, Alberta Canada . T6G 1H9.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Thermocapillary-electrohydrodynamic (TC-EHD) instability enhances liquid nanofilm patterning, creating smaller features and increasing active surface area by up to 18% through nanosized pillar formation.

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Area of Science:

  • Physics
  • Materials Science
  • Fluid Dynamics

Background:

  • Electrically assisted patterning is crucial for micro/nanofabrication.
  • Existing methods face limitations in feature size and surface area enhancement.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the combined thermocapillary-electrohydrodynamic (TC-EHD) instability for improved nanofilm patterning.
  • To achieve smaller feature sizes and higher active surface areas.

Main Methods:

  • Derivation of a 3-D thin film equation for nonisothermal films.
  • Linear stability (LS) analysis to identify influential factors.
  • Nonlinear simulations using a high-order finite difference code to study long-time interface evolution.

Main Results:

  • Thermocapillary effects led to the formation of nanosized pillars, significantly increasing pillar density.
  • Achieved relative interface area increases of up to 18% through pattern miniaturization.
  • Varying thermal conductivity ratios altered pattern formation, leading to nonuniform micro-pillar distribution.

Conclusions:

  • Combined TC-EHD instability offers a pathway to enhanced nanofilm patterning.
  • Nanosized pillar formation via TC effects is key to surface area enhancement.
  • Control over thermal properties is essential for predictable pattern generation.