Physical Society Colloquium
Laser-assisted surface engineering
Department of Chemical Engineering McGill University
Liquid surface interactions are abundant in our everyday lives, ranging from
rain droplets falling on surfaces to the lubrication of engines. Nature
provides many prominent examples that illustrate how to master surface
wetting and use its principles favorably to achieve certain functionalities.
My research builds upon biomimetic principles when trying to understand and
subsequently alter the behavior of liquids in contact with solid surfaces
treated by innovative ultrafast laser micromachining. Of particular
interest thereby are laser-matter interactions that not only lead to
modifications in surface topology but also in surface chemistry. To further
guide material selection and the choice of laser-processing parameters,
a solid understanding of the physical phenomena governing surface wetting
is required. This seminar will show some of our recent results regarding
femtosecond laser micromachining and wetting as well as highlight the former
as a high precision, microfabrication technique, which allows the production
of surface structures on two length scales (on the micro- and nanometer
scale) in one process step. This last characteristic is especially important
in biomimetic studies, since many interesting functionalities of natural
surfaces can be traced back to one common feature: a surface structure on
several length scales. With regard to actual engineering applications the
efforts focus on reducing/tailoring adhesion, drag or friction on various
metallic and polymeric surfaces.
Friday, November 28th 2014, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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