Adsorption of fine particles in air by a leaf is studied experimentally. It is found that each leaf can absorb only a kind of particles with almost same size, and it also exhibits high selectivity over other particles. The SEM study reveals that the size of nanopore on the epidermis is a main factor of the highly selective adsorption; the smaller nanopores can absorb larger nanoparticles in air. The morphology of a lotus leaf, which is waterproof and dustproof, has, on the other hand, many short nanofibrils instead of nanopores. It is concluded that the nanoscale geometrical structure of a surface affects its attraction/repulsion property. The experiment also shows that one square millimeter surface with nanopores in diameter of 18 nm can absorb 2 million nanoparticles of about 200 nm in diameter from air in 24 hours. A better understanding of the adsorption/repulsion mechanism could help the further design of bio-mimetic waterproof/dustproof artificial materials and artificial porous materials/fabrics/nonwovens for adsorption of nanoparticles in air.
Anders Tuxen, Sophie Carenco, Mahati Chintapalli, Cheng‐Hao Chuang, Carlos Escudero, Elzbieta Pach, Jiang Peng, Ferenc Borondics, Brandon J. Beberwyck, Paul Alivisatos, G. Thornton, W. F. Pong, Jinghua Guo, Rúben Pérez, Flemming Besenbacher, Miquel Salmerón
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