摘要:SummaryIn this paper, we report a finding that substrate affects the adhesion of charged super-repellent surfaces. Water droplet impacting on a super-repellent surface produces surface charge, whose expression depends on the substrate. The charged super-repellent surface is sticky to droplets for a suspended substrate made of dielectric materials, while it has low adhesion for a conducting substrate or stage attached at the bottom because of electrostatic induction. Theoretical analysis and simulation are conducted to elucidate the mechanism of substrate effect on surface adhesion. Finally, we develop a new approach to reversibly tune the adhesion of super-repellent surface by combining surface-charge-induced adhesion increase and electrostatic-induction-regulated express of net surface charge. As a proof-of-concept experiment, we demonstrate that droplet sorting and manipulations can be realized by using this controllable surface adhesion tuning approach, which has potential applications in advanced lab-on-a-drop platform.Graphical abstractDisplay OmittedHighlights•Substrate-dependent surface adhesion after droplet impact is systematically studied•Reversibly tunable surface adhesion with high magnitude is achieved•Efficient droplet sorting and manipulation are demonstratedSurface Property; Biomimetics; Materials Property