| Literature DB >> 26353971 |
Philip S Brown1, Bharat Bhushan1.
Abstract
Coatings with specific surface wetting properties are of interest for anti-fouling, anti-fogging, anti-icing, self-cleaning, anti-smudge, and oil-water separation applications. Many previous bioinspired surfaces are of limited use due to a lack of mechanical durability. Here, a layer-by-layer technique is utilized to create coatings with four combinations of water and oil repellency and affinity. An adapted layer-by-layer approach is tailored to yield specific surface properties, resulting in a durable, functional coating. This technique provides necessary flexibility to improve substrate adhesion combined with desirable surface chemistry. Polyelectrolyte binder, SiO2 nanoparticles, and silane or fluorosurfactant layers are deposited, combining surface roughness and necessary chemistry to result in four different coatings: superhydrophilic/superoleophilic, superhydrophobic/superoleophilic, superhydrophobic/superoleophobic, and superhydrophilic/superoleophobic. The superoleophobic coatings display hexadecane contact angles >150° with tilt angles <5°, whilst the superhydrophobic coatings display water contact angles >160° with tilt angles <2°. One coating combines both oleophobic and hydrophobic properties, whilst others mix and match oil and water repellency and affinity. Coating durability was examined through the use of micro/macrowear experiments. These coatings display transparency acceptable for some applications. Fabrication via this novel combination of techniques results in durable, functional coatings displaying improved performance compared to existing work where either durability or functionality is compromised.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26353971 PMCID: PMC4564852 DOI: 10.1038/srep14030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Examples of past coatings from the literature for each combination of water and oil repellency and affinity. No method covers all four.
| Surface properties | Materials | Contact/tilt angles | Comments | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hydrophilic/Oleophilic | Dip coated poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH), poly(sodium 4-styrene sulfonate) (PSS), silica nanoparticles | Water: ca. 0° Oil: N/A | Layer-by-layer technique used for anti-fogging coatings. No durability testing | |
| Dip coated PDDA, PSS, silica nanoparticles | Water: ca. 0° Oil: N/A | Superhydrophilic, anti-reflective coatings. No durability testing | ||
| Dip coated polydimethyldiallyl- ammonium chloride (PDDA), PSS, silica nanoparticles | Water: ca. 0° Oil: N/A | Layer-by-layer used to create hydrophilic channels for microfluidics. No durability testing | ||
| Hydrophobic/Oleophilic | Spray coated PTFE | Water: 156° Diesel oil: <4° | Applied to a mesh for oil–water separation. No durability testing | |
| Spray coated acrylic polymer and organosilane modified silica particles | Water: ca. 160°/ ca. 1 Oil: N/A | Applied to aluminum plates for anti-icing. No durability testing | ||
| Spray/spin coated fluoropolymer, nanoparticles | Water: 153°/8° Oil: N/A | Applied to aluminum plates for anti-icing. No durability testing | ||
| Dip coated polystyrene, polydimethylsiloxane modified silica nanoparticles | Water: 157°/4° Oil: ca. 0° | Applied to filter paper for oil–water separation. No durability testing | ||
| Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of carbon nanotubes | Water: 150°/7° Gasoline: 0° | Applied to mesh for oil–water separation. No durability testing | ||
| Spray coated/sandblasted PTFE | Water: 153° Oil: N/A | Applied to aluminum plates for anti-icing and ice adhesion tests | ||
| Hydrophobic/Oleophobic | Spray coated perfluoroalkyl methacrylic copolymer, TiO2 nanoparticles | Water: 164° Ethylene glycol: 144° | Hysteresis not studied, only ethylene glycol investigated. No durability testing | |
| CVD fluorosilane on textured, re-entrant SiO2 | Water: N/A Octane: 163°/18° | No durability testing. Complex texturing required | ||
| Photolithography then electropolymerization of tetrabuty- lammonium hexafluorophosphate | Water: 160° Hexadecane: 144°/40°Dodecane: 135° | Poor oil repellency (high tilt angles). No durability testing | ||
| Spin coated PDMS, silica nanoparticles then dip coated perfluorooctyl trichlorosilane | Water: 153°/ca. 0° Diiodomethane: 141°/12° | Coating shows reasonable durability. No low surface tension liquid repellency testing | ||
| Spray coated perfluorooctanoic acid, copper acetate | Water: 163°/4° Rapeseed oil: 155°/10° | Poor oil repellency (high tilt angles) and durability | ||
| Silica aerogel plus fluorinated surfactant | Water: 172°/22° Paraffin oil: 168°/38° | Poor repellency (high tilt angles) but good durability | ||
| Electrospray poly(dimethylsiloxane), fluorodecyl polyhedral oligomeric silsequioxane | Water: ca. 160°/2° Hexadecane: ca. 150°/5° | No durability testing | ||
| Dip coated silicone resin, silica nanoparticles then CVD of fluorosilane | Water: 170°/1° Hexadecane: 153°/4° | Good repellency and durability. Only tested on PET | ||
| Hydrophilic/Oleophobic | Synthesis of fluoroalkylated silicon co-oligomers | Water: 72° Water (after 25 min): 0° Dodecane: 60° | Coating is initially hydrophilic, not superhydrophilic as intended. Poor oil repellency. No durability testing | |
| Plasma deposited polymer then dip coated fluorosurfactant | Water: <20° Hexadecane: 82° | Not water affinity and oil repellency. No durability testing | ||
| Synthesis of dimethylacrylamid fluoroalkyl end-capped oligomers, silica gel hybrids | Water: 48° Water (after 30 min): 0° Dodecane: 41° | Coating is initially hydrophilic, not superhydrophilic as intended. Poor oil repellency. No durability testing | ||
| Spray coated PDDA, sodium per- fluorooctanoate, silica nanoparticles | Water: 165° Water (after 9 min): 0° Hexadecane: 155° Dodecane: 152°/10° | Coating is initially superhydrophobic, not superhydrophilic as intended. Requires additional treatment not suitable for industry. No durability testing | ||
| Spin/dip coated poly(styrene– | Water: <10° Hexadecane: 112° | Poor oil repellency. No durability testing | ||
| Dip coated fluoroalkyl end-capped vinyltrimethoxysilane oligomer, CaSi2 particles | Water: 129° Water (after 5 min): 0° Dodecane: 118° | Coating is initially hydrophobic, not superhydrophilic as intended. Poor oil repellency. No durability testing |
Figure 1Schematic of “flip-flop” vs “non–flip-flop” surface properties.
For the “flip-flop” coating, water is able to penetrate down through the repellent surfactant tails of the functional layer (fluorosurfactant) to the high surface tension portion of the coating while the bulky oil molecules are repelled. For non–flip-flop coatings, water is unable to penetrate the functional layer (fluorosilane).
Comparison of the various applications of the four layer-by-layer composite coatings.
| Functional layer | Surface properties | Applications |
|---|---|---|
| None | Superhydrophilic/Superoleophilic | Anti-fogging |
| Silane | Superhydrophobic/Superoleophilic | Self-cleaning Anti-fouling Anti-icing Oil–water separation |
| Fluorosilane | Superhydrophobic/Superoleophobic | Self-cleaning Anti-fouling Anti-smudge Anti-icing |
| Fluorosurfactant | Superhydrophilic/Superoleophobic | Anti-fouling Anti-smudge Anti-fogging Oil–water separation |
Figure 2Schematic of the four layer-by-layer composite coatings.
Each layer is deposited separately. Also shown are the chemical composition and charge of each layer. The functional layer (FL) is deposited last and provides the desired surface chemistry.
Figure 3Water and hexadecane droplets (5 μL) deposited on the four layer-by-layer composite coatings.
Comparison of contact and tilt angles for water and hexadecane droplets deposited on the four layer-by-layer composite coatings.
| Coating | Water | Hexadecane | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contact angle (°) | Tilt angle (°) | Contact angle (°) | Tilt angle (°) | |
| Superhydrophilic/Superoleophilic | ∼0 | N/A | ∼0 | N/A |
| Superhydrophobic/Superoleophilic | 161 ± 1 | 2 ± 1 | ∼0 | N/A |
| Superhydrophobic/Superoleophobic | 163 ± 1 | 2 ± 1 | 157 ± 1 | 4±1 |
| Superhydrophilic/Superoleophobic | <5 | N/A | 157 ± 1 | 4±1 |
Figure 4(a) Surface height maps and sample surface profiles (locations indicated by arrows) before and after AFM wear experiment with 15 μm radius borosilicate ball at a load of 10 μN for flat and superhydrophilic/superoleophobic layer-by-layer composite coatings. RMS roughness values are displayed, and (b) optical micrographs before and after wear experiments using ball-on-flat tribometer at 10 mN for flat and hydrophilic/oleophobic layer-by-layer composite coatings. Similar results were obtained for the three remaining layer-by-layer composite coatings.
Figure 5Photographs of flat and superhydrophilic/superoleophobic layer-by-layer composite coatings.
The flat coating appears transparent. Any reduction in transparency for the composite coating compared to the flat coating is due to the NP and FL layers.
Figure 6Photographs of the four layer-by-layer composite coatings after exposure to water vapor.
The hydrophilic coatings maintain transparency due to the formation of a thin water film on the surface. The hydrophobic coatings become opaque due to the formation of discrete water droplets on the surface.
Figure 7Photographs of the four layer-by-layer composite coatings after freezing and deposition of supercooled water.
The water immediately froze upon contact with the hydrophilic coatings whilst the droplets were able to roll off the hydrophobic coatings before freezing.
Figure 8Optical micrographs of contaminated coatings before and after self-cleaning test on flat and the superhydrophobic layer-by-layer composite coatings.
Dark spots on coatings and cloth indicate silicon carbide particle contaminants. Image analysis suggests a >90% removal of particles on the two composite coatings.
Figure 9Optical micrographs of contaminated coatings and oil-impregnated microfiber cloth before and after smudge test on flat and the superoleophobic layer-by-layer composite coatings.
Dark spots on coatings and cloth indicate silicon carbide particle contaminants.
Figure 10Photographs of the hydrophobic/oleophilic and hydrophilic/oleophobic layer-by-layer composite coated stainless steel meshes acting as oil–water separators.
On the superhydrophobic/superoleophilic coated mesh, water collects on top of the mesh whilst oil passes through. In contrast, on the superhydrophilic/superoleophobic coated mesh, water passes through the mesh while the oil remains on the top surface. Alternatively the meshes can be placed at an angle and oil and water collected simultaneously in separate beakers. Oil and water dyes used to enhance contrast.