Sustainable Repellent Coatings Based on Renewable Drying and Nondrying Oils

Contamination of surfaces can cause loss of performance in a variety of applications. Bioinspired coatings based on the lotus or pitcher plants provide surface topographies that create superhydrophobic or slippery features with self‐cleaning properties. However, typical fabrication procedures often...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced materials interfaces 2023-03, Vol.10 (7), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Dehm, Katharina E., Walter, Teresa, Weichselgartner, Matthias, Crisp, Ryan W., Wommer, Kirsten, Aust, Martin, Vogel, Nicolas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Contamination of surfaces can cause loss of performance in a variety of applications. Bioinspired coatings based on the lotus or pitcher plants provide surface topographies that create superhydrophobic or slippery features with self‐cleaning properties. However, typical fabrication procedures often involve potentially toxic chemicals, perfluorinated compounds, nondegradable polymers, and energy‐intensive methods, with negative consequences for the environment. Here, a sustainable coating process based on renewable materials to prepare superhydrophobic and liquid‐infused coatings with minimal environmental impact is presented. A scalable spray coating protocol is used. Synthetic liquid and polymeric materials are substituted with natural drying oils, i.e., oils that react with ambient oxygen and cure to solid materials, as polymeric binder in which silica particles are partially embedded. The self‐cleaning characteristics against aqueous contaminations are investigated as a function of the drying oil used as binder. The assessment of the mechanical stability reveals the advantage of an underlying “primer layer” of the pure oil. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that oils from renewable sources can act as lubricants for the creation of slippery surfaces. The efficiency of such sustainable slippery coatings in reducing concrete adhesion points toward their applicability in real world scenarios. Sustainable self‐cleaning coatings based on the lotus and pitcher plant are produced using an aqueous dispersion‐based system and renewable sources. Natural drying oils serve as binder component and natural nondrying oils as lubricants to minimize the environmental impact. Spray‐coating provides the possibility for a scale‐up to real‐word applications. Aging behavior, mechanical resistance, and resistance to concrete adhesion are investigated.
ISSN:2196-7350
2196-7350
DOI:10.1002/admi.202202032