The drag force acting on a body moving in a fluid has two components, friction drag due to fluid viscosity and form drag due to flow separation behind the body. When present, form drag is usually the most significant between the two and in many applications, streamlining efficiently reduces or prevents flow separation. As studied here, when the operating fluid is water, a promising technique for form drag reduction is to modify the walls of the body with superhydrophobic surfaces. These surfaces entrap gas bubbles in their asperities, avoiding the direct contact of the liquid with the wall. Superhydrophobic surfaces have been vastly studied for reducing friction drag. We show they are also effective in reducing flow separation in turbulent ...
Superhydrophobic surfaces reduce the frictional drag between water and solid materials, but this eff...
Superhydrophobic surfaces trap a discontinuous air layer through their texture which, in addition to...
Significant effort has been placed on the development of surfaces which reduce the amount of drag ex...
The drag force acting on a body moving in a fluid has two components, friction drag due to fluid vis...
In recent years, research on superhydrophobic surfaces has exploded from more than five decades of r...
Superhydrophobic surfaces are known to exhibit reduced viscous drag due to "slip" associat...
Superhydrophobic surface features could be used to obtain significant drag reduction in turbulent co...
Properties of superhydrophobic materials are examined in light of their possible use for drag reduct...
The drag reduction induced by superhydrophobic surfaces is investigated in a turbulent pipe flow. We...
Recent developments of superhydrophobic surfaces (SHSs) have attracted much attention because of the...
Recent developments of superhydrophobic surfaces (SHSs) have attracted much attention because of the...
Superhydrophobic (SHPo) surfaces have been investigated vigorously since around 2000 due in large pa...
Superhydrophobic surfaces trap a discontinuous air layer through their texture which, in addition to...
Superhydrophobic surfaces trap a discontinuous air layer through their texture which, in addition to...
Superhydrophobic surfaces trap a discontinuous air layer through their texture which, in addition to...
Superhydrophobic surfaces reduce the frictional drag between water and solid materials, but this eff...
Superhydrophobic surfaces trap a discontinuous air layer through their texture which, in addition to...
Significant effort has been placed on the development of surfaces which reduce the amount of drag ex...
The drag force acting on a body moving in a fluid has two components, friction drag due to fluid vis...
In recent years, research on superhydrophobic surfaces has exploded from more than five decades of r...
Superhydrophobic surfaces are known to exhibit reduced viscous drag due to "slip" associat...
Superhydrophobic surface features could be used to obtain significant drag reduction in turbulent co...
Properties of superhydrophobic materials are examined in light of their possible use for drag reduct...
The drag reduction induced by superhydrophobic surfaces is investigated in a turbulent pipe flow. We...
Recent developments of superhydrophobic surfaces (SHSs) have attracted much attention because of the...
Recent developments of superhydrophobic surfaces (SHSs) have attracted much attention because of the...
Superhydrophobic (SHPo) surfaces have been investigated vigorously since around 2000 due in large pa...
Superhydrophobic surfaces trap a discontinuous air layer through their texture which, in addition to...
Superhydrophobic surfaces trap a discontinuous air layer through their texture which, in addition to...
Superhydrophobic surfaces trap a discontinuous air layer through their texture which, in addition to...
Superhydrophobic surfaces reduce the frictional drag between water and solid materials, but this eff...
Superhydrophobic surfaces trap a discontinuous air layer through their texture which, in addition to...
Significant effort has been placed on the development of surfaces which reduce the amount of drag ex...