4.8 Article

Efficient Heat Shielding of Steel with Multilayer Nanocomposite Thin Film

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 16, Pages 19369-19376

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c03781

Keywords

polymer nanocomposite; layer-by-layer assembly; polyethylenimine; vermiculite; thermal barrier coatings

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Research has shown that multilayer nanocomposite films can effectively protect metal substrates from extreme heat by forming ceramic bubbles, slowing down heat transfer. This technology could be utilized to safeguard important metal components (in automobiles, aircraft, etc.) from fire-related damage or other transient high-temperature situations.
In an effort to protect metal substrates from extreme heat, polymer-clay multilayer thin films are studied as expendable thermal barrier coatings. Nanocomposite films with a thickness ranging from 2 to 35 mu m were deposited on steel plates and exposed to the flame from a butane torch. The 35 mu m coating, composed of 14 deposited bilayers of tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (THAM)-buffered polyethylenimine (PEI) and vermiculite clay (VMT), decreased the maximum temperature observed on the back side of a 0.32 cm thick steel plate by over 100 degrees C when heated with a butane torch. Upon exposure to high temperature, the polymer and amine salt undergo pyrolysis and intumesce, subsequently forming a char and blowing gas. The char encases the nanoclay platelets, and a ceramic bubble is formed. The macro-scale bubble, in tandem with the nanocomposite coating properties, increases resistance to heat transfer into the underlying metal substrate. This heat shielding behavior occurs through radiative effects and low aggregate through-plane conductivity resulting from multilayer nanodomains and intumesced porosity (i.e., conduction through the gas as the film expands to form a ceramic bubble). These relatively thin and lightweight films could be used to protect important metal parts (in automobiles, aircraft, etc.) from fire-related damage or other types of transient high-temperature situations.

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