4.8 Article

Superhydrophobic and Slippery Lubricant-Infused Flexible Transparent Nanocellulose Films by Photoinduced Thiol-Ene Functionalization

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 8, Issue 49, Pages 34115-34122

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.6b11741

Keywords

photochemistry; thiol-ene reaction; nanocellulose; superhydrophobicity; slippery lubricant-infused porous surface; SLIPS; superhydrophobicity; surface patterning

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland through Centres of Excellence Programme
  2. ERC [337077-DropCellArray]
  3. Helmholtz Association's Initiative and Networking Fund [VH-NG-621]

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Films comprising nanofibrillated cellulose (NFC) are suitable substrates for flexible devices in analytical, sensor, diagnostic, and display technologies. However, some major challenges in such developments include their high moisture sensitivity and the complexity of current methods available for functionalization and patterning. In this work, we present a facile process for tailoring the surface wettability and functionality of NFC films by a fast and versatile approach. First, the NFC films were coated with a layer of reactive nanoporous silicone nanofilament by polycondensation of trichlorovinylsilane (TCVS). The TCVS afforded reactive vinyl groups, thereby enabling simple UV-induced functionalization of NFC films with various thiol-containing molecules via the photo click thiol-ene reaction. Modification with perfluoroalkyl thiols resulted in robust superhydrophobic surfaces, which could then be further transformed into transparent slippery lubricant-infused NFC films that displayed repellency against both aqueous and organic liquids with surface tensions as low as 18 mN.m(-1). Finally, transparent and flexible NFC films incorporated hydrophilic micropatterns by modification with OH, NH2, or COOH surface groups, enabling space-resolved super hydrophobic-hydrophilic domains. Flexibility, transparency, patternability, and perfect superhydrophobicity of the produced nanocellulose substrates warrants their application in biosensing, display protection, and biomedical and diagnostics devices.

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