4.7 Article

Spray-Painted Hydrogel Coating for Marine Antifouling

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS TECHNOLOGIES
Volume 6, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/admt.202000911

Keywords

adhesion; antifouling coatings; hydrogels; hydrophilic coating; spray‐ painting

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [NSFC 11934008, 11674153, 11804148]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20180320]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [020414380148, 020514913212, 020414380138, 020414380080]
  4. Technological Innovation Foundation of Nanjing University [020414913413]

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The article introduces a paintable antifouling hydrogel coating which, through the introduction of an epoxy midcoat layer, provides strong noncovalent adhesion to various surfaces and covalent linkages to hydrogel layers to achieve outstanding antifouling properties against various contaminants. This hydrogel coating degrades slowly in sea water and facilitates the release of fouling biomolecules and organisms, making it a promising solution for marine antifouling and other relevant fields due to its convenient coating processes and high adhesion strength.
Biofouling is a longstanding problem for biomedical devices, food storage, and marine equipment. Traditional antifouling strategies involve the use of biocidal agents, low surface-energy surface, and nanopatterned coatings. Recent studies show that hydrophilic surfaces are also promising for antifouling by directly reducing the adhesion of proteins and polysaccharides. However, it remains challenging to stably and conveniently coat nonadhesive hydrophilic polymers to various surfaces in high density. Especially, for marine antifouling, large-area painting of hydrophilic polymer coatings is susceptible to low adhesion strength, inhomogeneous surface coverage, and short durability. Here, a paintable antifouling hydrogel coating is proposed to overcome these limitations. An epoxy midcoat layer is introduced to provide both strong noncovalent adhesion to various surfaces and covalent linkages to hydrogel layers. The 3D hydrogel layers provide homogenous, relatively low Young's modulus and dense surface coverage and therefore shows outstanding antifouling properties toward various proteins, polysaccharides, seaweeds, and oil. Moreover, this hydrogel coating degrades slowly in sea water and facilitates the release of fouling biomolecules and organisms. Considering the great antifouling and fouling release properties, convenient coating processes, and high adhesion strength, this novel paintable antifouling hydrogel coating is anticipated to be broadly applicable for marine antifouling and other relevant fields.

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