Ultra-Thin Lubricant-Infused Vertical Graphene Nanoscaffolds for High-Performance Dropwise Condensation
Abinash Tripathy, Cheuk Wing Edmond Lam, Diana Davila, Matteo Donati,, Athanasios Milionis, Chander Shekhar Sharma, Dimos Poulikakos

TL;DR
This paper introduces an ultra-thin, conductive lubricant-infused vertical graphene nanoscaffold that significantly enhances heat transfer and durability in dropwise condensation, outperforming traditional surfaces in efficiency and stability.
Contribution
The study presents a novel ultra-thin, conductive graphene-based LIS architecture that reduces thermal resistance and lubricant depletion, improving condensation performance and durability.
Findings
Doubling heat transfer performance compared to CuO LIS.
Maintains stable condensation for at least 7 hours.
Consumes 52.6% less lubricant than existing LIS.
Abstract
Lubricant-infused surfaces (LIS) are highly efficient in repelling water and constitute a very promising family of materials for condensation processes occurring in a broad range of energy applications. However, the performance of LIS in such processes is limited by the inherent thermal resistance imposed by the thickness of the lubricant and supporting surface structure, as well as by the gradual depletion of the lubricant over time. Here we present a remarkable, ultra-thin (~70 nm) and conductive LIS architecture, obtained by infusing lubricant into a vertically grown graphene nanoscaffold on copper. The ultra-thin nature of the scaffold, combined with the high in-plane thermal conductivity of graphene, drastically minimize earlier limitations, effectively doubling the heat transfer performance compared to a state-of-the-art CuO LIS surface. We show that the effect of the thermal…
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