World’s first new discovery of liquid directional steering in two centuries
- An artificial surface with 3D ratchet structures enables liquids of different surface tension to move in different directions.
- The research opens a new avenue for structure-induced liquid transport and emerging applications.

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Inspired by Mother Nature, scientists of City University of Hong Kong (CityU) have discovered that the spreading direction of different liquids deposited on the same surface can be steered, a challenge that had remained unsolved for over two centuries.
This breakthrough enriches our understanding of conventional solid-liquid interactions, and it has profound implications for a whole range of scientific and industrial contexts, such as fluidics design and heat transfer enhancement.
Led by Professor Wang Zuankai, Chair Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering (MNE) of CityU, the research team found that the unexpected liquid transport behaviour of the Araucaria leaf provides an exciting prototype for liquid directional steering.

By mimicking the natural structure of the Araucaria leaf, the team designed an Araucaria leaf-inspired surface (ALIS) with 3D ratchets that enable different water-ethanol mixtures, which are subject to varying levels of surface tensions, to spread in three directions: forward, backward and even bidirectional.
The study was recently published in the prestigious scientific journal Science under the title “Three-dimensional Capillary Ratchet-induced Liquid Directional Steering”.
