are pretty amazing. Water bounces when it's dropped on the surfaces created this way.
They mention uses such as aircraft wings (no de-icing) and sanitation. I didn't see a mention of boat hulls, but that would be another area with a ton of commercial application.
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[ 0.21 ms ] story [ 19.2 ms ] threadI was wondering whether this could be done on glasses / transparent surfaces without greatly affecting the refractive index.
Possibilities are endless.
http://sploid.gizmodo.com/new-amazing-metal-is-so-hydrophobi...
are pretty amazing. Water bounces when it's dropped on the surfaces created this way.
They mention uses such as aircraft wings (no de-icing) and sanitation. I didn't see a mention of boat hulls, but that would be another area with a ton of commercial application.