4.8 Article

Highly Oil-Repellent Thermoplastic Boundaries via Surface Delivery of CF3 Groups by Molecular Bottlebrush Additives

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 34, Pages 38626-38637

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c08649

Keywords

bottlebrush; molecular brush; oil repellency; water repellency; pelluoropolyethers; oleophobicity; hydrophobicity; dissipative particle dynamics

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (via EPSCoR) [OIA-1655740, I/UCRC-1034979]
  2. Clemson University Research Foundation

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We fabricated thermoplastic surfaces possessing extremely limited water and oil wettability without employment of long-chain perfluoroalkyl (LCPFA) substances. Namely, by taking advantage of the structure and behavior of original oleophobic perfluoropolyether (PFPE) methacrylate (PFM) molecular bottlebrush (MBB) additive we obtained polymeric surfaces with oil contact angles well above 80 degrees and surface energy on the level of 10 mN/m. Those angles and surface energies are the highest and the lowest respective values reported to date for any bulk solid flat organic surface not containing LCPFA. We show experimentally and computationally that this remarkable oil repellency is attributed to migration of small quantities of the oleophobic MBB additives to the surface of the thermoplastics. Severe mismatch in the affinity between the densely grafted long side chains of MBB and a host matrix promotes stretching and densification of mobile side chains delivering the lowest surface energy functionalities (CF3) to the materials' boundary. Our studies demonstrate that PFM can be utilized as an effective low surface energy additive to conventional thermoplastic polymers, such as poly(methyl methacrylate) and Nylon-6. We show that films containing PFM achieve the level of oil repellency significantly higher than that of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), a fully perfluorinated thermoplastic. The surface energy of the films is also significantly lower than that of PTFE, even at low concentrations of PFM additives.

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