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1.
Small ; : e2400580, 2024 Mar 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38529758

ABSTRACT

During synthetic textile washing, rubbing between fibres or against the washing machine, exacerbated by the elevated temperature, initiates the release of millions of microplastic fibres into the environment. A general tribological strategy is reported that practically eliminates the release of microplastic fibres from laundered apparel. The two-layer fabric finishes combine low-friction, liquidlike polymer brushes with "molecular primers", that is, molecules that durably bond the low-friction layers to the surface of the polyester or nylon fabrics. It is shown that when the coefficient of friction is below a threshold of 0.25, microplastic fibre release is substantially reduced, by up to 96%. The fabric finishes can be water-wicking or water-repellent, and their comfort properties are retained after coating, indicating a tunable and practical strategy toward a sustainable textile industry and plastic-free oceans and marine foodstuffs.

2.
Small ; 19(38): e2301142, 2023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37202658

ABSTRACT

Droplet friction is common and significant in any field where liquids interact with solid surfaces. This study explores the molecular capping of surface-tethered, liquid-like polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) brushes and its substantial effect on droplet friction and liquid repellency. By exchanging polymer chain terminal silanol groups for methyls using a single-step vapor phase reaction, the contact line relaxation time is decreased by three orders of magnitude-from seconds to milliseconds. This leads to a substantial reduction in the static and kinetic friction of both high- and low-surface tension fluids. Vertical droplet oscillatory imaging confirms the ultra-fast contact line dynamics of capped PDMS brushes, which is corroborated by live contact angle monitoring during fluid flow. This study proposes that truly omniphobic surfaces should not only have very small contact angle hysteresis, but their contact line relaxation time should be significantly shorter than the timescale of their useful application, i.e., a Deborah number less than unity. Capped PDMS brushes that meet these criteria demonstrate complete suppression of the coffee ring effect, excellent anti-fouling behavior, directional droplet transport, increased water harvesting performance, and transparency retention following the evaporation of non-Newtonian fluids.

4.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 5119, 2022 Aug 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36045129

ABSTRACT

Ice accretion causes problems in vital industries and has been addressed over the past decades with either passive or active de-icing systems. This work presents a smart, hybrid (passive and active) de-icing system through the combination of a low interfacial toughness coating, printed circuit board heaters, and an ice-detecting microwave sensor. The coating's interfacial toughness with ice is found to be temperature dependent and can be modulated using the embedded heaters. Accordingly, de-icing is realized without melting the interface. The synergistic combination of the low interfacial toughness coating and periodic heaters results in a greater de-icing power density than a full-coverage heater system. The hybrid de-icing system also shows durability towards repeated icing/de-icing, mechanical abrasion, outdoor exposure, and chemical contamination. A non-contact planar microwave resonator sensor is additionally designed and implemented to precisely detect the presence or absence of water or ice on the surface while operating beneath the coating, further enhancing the system's energy efficiency. Scalability of the smart coating is demonstrated using large (up to 1 m) iced interfaces. Overall, the smart hybrid system designed here offers a paradigm shift in de-icing that can efficiently render a surface ice-free without the need for energetically expensive interface melting.

5.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(4): 6221-6229, 2022 Feb 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35061366

ABSTRACT

High foulant adhesion remains a critical issue in a wide range of industries, such as ice accretion on aircraft, biofoulants on ships, wax build-up within pipelines, and scale formation in water remediation. Previous anti-fouling surfaces have only shown promise for reducing the adhesion of a single foulant system; a multi-foulant anti-fouling technology remains elusive. Here, we introduce a mechanical metamaterial-based approach to develop anti-fouling surfaces applicable to a wide range of fouling substances. The suspended kirigami inverted nil-adhesion surfaces, or SKINS, show significantly reduced adhesion of ice, different waxes, dried mud, pressure-sensitive adhesive tape, and a marine hard foulant simulant. SKINS mimic the wrinkling of hard films adhered to soft substrates. Foulant adhesion can be minimized by this wrinkling, which may be controlled by tuning the kirigami motif, sheet material, and foulant dimensions. SKINS reduce adhesion mechanically and were found to be independent of surface energy, enabling their fabrication from commonplace hydrophilic polymers like cellulose acetate. Optimized SKINS exhibited extremely low foulant adhesion, for example, ice adhesion strengths less than 5 kPa (a >250-fold reduction from aluminum substates), and were found to maintain their performance on curved surfaces like transmission cables. The low foulant adhesion persisted over 30 repeated foulant deposition and removal cycles, demonstrating the anti-fouling durability of SKINS. Overall, SKINS offers a previously unexplored route to achieving low foulant adhesion that is highly tunable in both geometry and material selection, is applicable to many different fouling substances, and maintains extremely low foulant adhesion even on complex substrates over large fouled interfaces.

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