4.7 Article

Nonfluorinated, transparent, and spontaneous self-healing superhydrophobic coatings enabled by supramolecular polymers

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 404, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2020.126504

Keywords

Superhydrophobic coatings; Transparent coatings; Self-healing materials; Self-cleaning; Supramolecular polymers

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21971083]
  2. Department of Science and Technology of Jilin Province [20190103019JH]

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Transparent self-healing superhydrophobic coatings have been successfully fabricated using a nonfluorinated, transparent, and superhydrophobic material. The coatings show good transparency and superhydrophobicity, enabling their application on various substrates.
Transparent self-healing superhydrophobic coatings have important applications on lenses, solar cells, helmet visors, and windshields a al. However, their applications at the present stage are limited by hazardous fluorinated materials, low transmittance, and heating treatment for healing. In this study, nonfluorinated, transparent, and superhydrophobic coatings with spontaneous self-healing ability are successfully fabricated via spray coating an ethanol solution of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based supramolecular polymer cross-linked via Ncoordinated boroxines (N-Boroxine-PDMS) and SiO2 nanoparticles. Benefiting from the use of spray-coating technique, the transparent self-healing superhydrophobic coatings can be readily applied to various substrates such as plastic spectacle lens, wood, metal, and paper, greatly expanding the scope of applications. The obtained coatings possess good transparency with a transmittance at 550 nm of 90.1% and excellent superhydrophobicity with a contact angle of 160.9 degrees and a sliding angle of 1 degrees, which can be attributed to the use of N-Boroxine-PDMS that is inherently transparent and hydrophobic. The N-Boroxine-PDMS/SiO2 coatings can withstand water impact, UV irradiation, and heating at elevated temperatures due to the use of N-Boroxine-PDMS. More importantly, the coatings are capable of repetitively and spontaneously healing the chemical damage caused by exposure to hydrogen peroxide or O-2 plasma at room temperature because the reversibility of N-coordinated boroxines allows the oligomers of N-Boroxine-PDMS readily migrate to the damaged surface. Our finds show evidence that the use of properly designed supramolecular polymers as coating materials provides a simple and effective way to simultaneously integrate good transparency, stability, and spontaneous room-temperature self-healing ability in superhydrophobic coatings.

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