| Literature DB >> 27714994 |
Christoph Schlaich1, Luis Cuellar Camacho1, Leixiao Yu1, Katharina Achazi1, Qiang Wei1,2, Rainer Haag1.
Abstract
Facile approaches for the fabrication of substrate independent superamphiphobic surfaces that can repel both water and organic liquids have been limited. The design of such super-repellent surfaces is still a major challenge of surface chemistry and physics. Herein, we describe a simple and efficient dip-coating approach for the fabrication of highly hierarchical surface coatings with superamphiphobic properties for a broad range of materials based on a mussel-inspired dendritic polymer (MI-dPG). The MI-dPG coating process provides a precise roughness control, and the construction of highly hierarchical structures was achieved either directly by pH-controlled aggregation or in combination with nanoparticles (NP). Moreover, the fabrication of coatings with a thickness and roughness gradient was possible via simple adjustment of the depth of the coating solution. Subsequent postmodification of these highly hierarchical structures with fluorinated molecules yielded a surface with superamphiphobic properties that successfully prevented the wetting of liquids with a low surface tension down to about 30 mN/m. The generated superamphiphobic coatings exhibit impressive repellency to water, surfactant containing solutions, and biological liquids, such as human serum, and are flexible on soft substrates.Entities:
Keywords: hierarchical coatings; mussel-inspired adhesives; protein-resistant surfaces; self-cleaning; superamphiphobic surfaces
Year: 2016 PMID: 27714994 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.6b08487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229