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Biotemplate Replication of Novel Mangifera indica Leaf (MIL) for Atmospheric Water Harvesting: Intrinsic Surface Wettability and Collection Efficiency

Water shortage has become a global crisis that has posed and still poses a serious threat to the human race, especially in developing countries. Harvesting moisture from the atmosphere is a viable approach to easing the world water crisis due to its ubiquitous nature. Inspired by nature, biotemplate...

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Autores principales: Foday Jr, Edward Hingha, Sesay, Taiwo, Koroma, Emmanuel Bartholomew, Kanneh, Anthony Amara Golia Seseh, Chineche, Ekeoma Bridget, Jalloh, Alpha Yayah, Koroma, John Mambu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9589950/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36278704
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics7040147
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author Foday Jr, Edward Hingha
Sesay, Taiwo
Koroma, Emmanuel Bartholomew
Kanneh, Anthony Amara Golia Seseh
Chineche, Ekeoma Bridget
Jalloh, Alpha Yayah
Koroma, John Mambu
author_facet Foday Jr, Edward Hingha
Sesay, Taiwo
Koroma, Emmanuel Bartholomew
Kanneh, Anthony Amara Golia Seseh
Chineche, Ekeoma Bridget
Jalloh, Alpha Yayah
Koroma, John Mambu
author_sort Foday Jr, Edward Hingha
collection PubMed
description Water shortage has become a global crisis that has posed and still poses a serious threat to the human race, especially in developing countries. Harvesting moisture from the atmosphere is a viable approach to easing the world water crisis due to its ubiquitous nature. Inspired by nature, biotemplate surfaces have been given considerable attention in recent years though these surfaces still suffer from intrinsic trade-offs making replication more challenging. In the design of artificial surfaces, maximizing their full potential and benefits as that of the natural surface is difficult. Here, we conveniently made use of Mangifera indica leaf (MIL) and its replicated surfaces (RMIL) to collect atmosphere water. This research provides a novel insight into the facile replication mechanism of a wettable surface made of Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), which has proven useful in collecting atmospheric water. This comparative study shows that biotemplate surfaces (RMIL) with hydrophobic characteristics outperform natural hydrophilic surfaces (DMIL and FMIL) in droplet termination and water collection abilities. Water collection efficiency from the Replicated Mangifera indica leaf (RMIL) surface was shown to be superior to that of the Dry Mangifera indica leaf (DMIL) and Fresh Mangifera indica leaf (FMIL) surfaces. Furthermore, the wettability of the DMIL, FMIL, and RMIL was thoroughly investigated, with the apices playing an important role in droplet roll-off.
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spelling pubmed-95899502022-10-25 Biotemplate Replication of Novel Mangifera indica Leaf (MIL) for Atmospheric Water Harvesting: Intrinsic Surface Wettability and Collection Efficiency Foday Jr, Edward Hingha Sesay, Taiwo Koroma, Emmanuel Bartholomew Kanneh, Anthony Amara Golia Seseh Chineche, Ekeoma Bridget Jalloh, Alpha Yayah Koroma, John Mambu Biomimetics (Basel) Article Water shortage has become a global crisis that has posed and still poses a serious threat to the human race, especially in developing countries. Harvesting moisture from the atmosphere is a viable approach to easing the world water crisis due to its ubiquitous nature. Inspired by nature, biotemplate surfaces have been given considerable attention in recent years though these surfaces still suffer from intrinsic trade-offs making replication more challenging. In the design of artificial surfaces, maximizing their full potential and benefits as that of the natural surface is difficult. Here, we conveniently made use of Mangifera indica leaf (MIL) and its replicated surfaces (RMIL) to collect atmosphere water. This research provides a novel insight into the facile replication mechanism of a wettable surface made of Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), which has proven useful in collecting atmospheric water. This comparative study shows that biotemplate surfaces (RMIL) with hydrophobic characteristics outperform natural hydrophilic surfaces (DMIL and FMIL) in droplet termination and water collection abilities. Water collection efficiency from the Replicated Mangifera indica leaf (RMIL) surface was shown to be superior to that of the Dry Mangifera indica leaf (DMIL) and Fresh Mangifera indica leaf (FMIL) surfaces. Furthermore, the wettability of the DMIL, FMIL, and RMIL was thoroughly investigated, with the apices playing an important role in droplet roll-off. MDPI 2022-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9589950/ /pubmed/36278704 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics7040147 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Foday Jr, Edward Hingha
Sesay, Taiwo
Koroma, Emmanuel Bartholomew
Kanneh, Anthony Amara Golia Seseh
Chineche, Ekeoma Bridget
Jalloh, Alpha Yayah
Koroma, John Mambu
Biotemplate Replication of Novel Mangifera indica Leaf (MIL) for Atmospheric Water Harvesting: Intrinsic Surface Wettability and Collection Efficiency
title Biotemplate Replication of Novel Mangifera indica Leaf (MIL) for Atmospheric Water Harvesting: Intrinsic Surface Wettability and Collection Efficiency
title_full Biotemplate Replication of Novel Mangifera indica Leaf (MIL) for Atmospheric Water Harvesting: Intrinsic Surface Wettability and Collection Efficiency
title_fullStr Biotemplate Replication of Novel Mangifera indica Leaf (MIL) for Atmospheric Water Harvesting: Intrinsic Surface Wettability and Collection Efficiency
title_full_unstemmed Biotemplate Replication of Novel Mangifera indica Leaf (MIL) for Atmospheric Water Harvesting: Intrinsic Surface Wettability and Collection Efficiency
title_short Biotemplate Replication of Novel Mangifera indica Leaf (MIL) for Atmospheric Water Harvesting: Intrinsic Surface Wettability and Collection Efficiency
title_sort biotemplate replication of novel mangifera indica leaf (mil) for atmospheric water harvesting: intrinsic surface wettability and collection efficiency
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9589950/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36278704
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics7040147
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