Skip to content

QualityPoint Technologies News

Emerging Technologies News

Menu
  • About Us
  • Technology
  • Medical
  • Robots
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
  • 3D Printing
  • Contact Us
Menu

Huge Discount Offer: 14 ebooks + 2 courses

Engineers Identify How to Keep Surfaces Dry Underwater

Posted on August 19, 2015

Imagine staying dry under water for months. Now Northwestern University engineers have examined a wide variety of surfaces that can do just that — and, better yet, they know why.

The research team is the first to identify the ideal “roughness” needed in the texture of a surface to keep it dry for a long period of time when submerged in water. The valleys in the surface roughness typically need to be less than one micron in width, the researchers found. That’s really small — less than one millionth of a meter — but these nanoscopic valleys have macroscopic impact.

Understanding how the surfaces deflect water so well means the valuable feature could be reproduced in other materials on a mass scale, potentially saving billions of dollars in a variety of industries, from antifouling surfaces for shipping to pipe coatings resulting in lower drag. That’s science and engineering, not serendipity, at work for the benefit of the economy.

Direct nanoscale imaging of water-solid interfaces.
Direct nanoscale imaging of water-solid interfaces.

“When the valleys are less than one micron wide, pockets of water vapor or gas accumulate in them by underwater evaporation or effervescence, just like a drop of water evaporates without having to boil it. These gas pockets deflect water, keeping the surface dry”.The study is published on August 18 in the journal Scientific Reports.

In their experiments, the researchers used a variety of materials with and without the key surface roughness and submerged them in water. Samples with the nanoscale roughness remained dry for up to four months, the duration of the experiment. Other samples were placed in harsh environments, where dissolved gas was removed from the ambient liquid, and they also remained dry.

srep12311-f3The researchers also report that nature uses the same strategy of surface roughness in certain aquatic insects, such as water bugs and water striders. Small hairs on the surfaces of their body have the less-than-one-micron spacing, allowing gas to be retained between the hairs.

“These gas-retaining insects have surface properties consistent with our predictions, allowing them to stay dry for a long time.”The researchers focused on the nanoscopic structure of surfaces, which, at the nanoscale, are somewhat akin to the texture of a carpet, with tiny spike-like elevations separated by valley-shaped pores in between.

When submerged, water tends to cling to the top of the spikes, while air and water vapor accrue in the pores between them. The combination of trapped air and water vapor within these cavities forms a gaseous layer that deters moisture from seeping into the surface below.

“When we looked at the rough surfaces under the microscope, we could see clearly the vacant gaps — where the protective water vapor is.”

Historically, scientists had not understood how to keep water vapor from succumbing to condensation within the pore, which can cause water to wet the surface.

But the Northwestern team found the molecular key: They demonstrated that when the valleys are less than one micron in width, they can sustain the trapped air as well as vapor in their gasified states, strengthening the seal that thwarts wetness.

The study, titled “Sustaining Dry Surfaces Under Water,” also includes authors from ETH Zürich, Switzerland; Arizona State University; University of Illinois at Chicago; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and the University of Denmark.

Share

Related News:

  1. New nanomaterial can extract hydrogen fuel from seawater
  2. MIT Engineers create Nanobionic Light-Emitting Plants that can glow like a lamp
  3. Single metalens focuses all colors of the rainbow in one point
  4. Rice scientists create patterned graphene onto food, paper, cloth, cardboard
Master RAG ⭐ Rajamanickam.com ⭐ Bundle Offer ⭐ Merch ⭐ AI Course

  • Bundle Offer
  • Hire AI Developer

Latest News

  • MIT Researchers Unveil New Framework to Test AI Privacy Risks in Clinical Models January 6, 2026
  • MIT Researchers Develop AI-Driven Robot That Builds Furniture From Text Prompts December 17, 2025
  • Kling O1: A New Breakthrough in AI Video Creation December 4, 2025
  • Coactive: Teaching AI to See and Understand Visual Content June 10, 2025
  • Harvard Sues Trump Administration Over International Student Ban May 23, 2025
  • Stanford Researchers Develop AI Agents That Simulate Human Behavior with High Accuracy May 23, 2025
  • ​Firebase Studio: Google’s New Platform for Building AI-Powered Applications April 11, 2025
  • MIT Researchers Develop Framework to Enhance LLMs in Complex Planning April 7, 2025
  • MIT and NVIDIA Unveil HART: A Breakthrough in AI Image Generation March 25, 2025
  • Can LLMs Truly Understand Time Series Anomalies? March 18, 2025

Pages

  • About Us
  • Basics of 3D Printing
  • Key Innovations
  • Know about Graphene
  • Privacy Policy
  • Shop
  • Contact Us

Archives

Developed by QualityPoint Technologies (QPT)

QPT Products | eBook | Privacy

Timesheet | Calendar Generator

©2026 QualityPoint Technologies News | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme