4.6 Article

Preparation, Surface Characterization, and Water Resistance of Silicate and Sol-Silicate Inorganic-Organic Hybrid Dispersion Coatings for Wood

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14133559

Keywords

wood; silicate; sol-silicate; coating; roughness; adhesion

Funding

  1. Slovenian National Research Agency (ARRS) [N4-0117, P4-0015]

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This study compared the performance of silicate and sol-silicate coatings on wood, finding that silicate coatings had sufficient adhesion strength for wood while sol-silicate coatings had lower adhesion strength. Post-application methods can reduce the permeability of the coatings, and using organic primers containing nanosilica can increase the adhesion of the coatings.
The purpose of this study was to comparatively investigate the behavior of silicate and sol-silicate coatings non-modified or modified with an organosilane on wood and on wood pre-coated with silica-mineralized primers. Adhesion strength, morphology, and water permeability and related damages were studied to evaluate the possibility of utilizing such inorganic-based coating systems for durable protection of wood without or with relatively cheap and water-borne primers. Potassium silicate and potassium methylsiliconate aqueous solutions and a colloidal silica were used for the preparation of the coatings. The white coating paints were brushed on beech wood substrates at a rate of 220 g center dot m(-2). The coatings exhibited good coverage ability. The pull-off adhesion strength values appeared to be related to pH following a polynomial law. The adhesion strength for the silicate coatings were adequate (above 3 MPa and up to 5 MPa) for wood, whereas the values for the sol-silicates were too low for practical applications. The adhesion values were in general higher for the samples cured in a climate room (23 +/- 3 degrees C and 75 +/- 2% relative humidity) than the samples cured in the ambient atmosphere of the laboratory (23 +/- 3 degrees C and 25 +/- 5% relative humidity). The presence of microdefects (cracks, holes) was revealed in the coating layers by optical and scanning electron microscopy. The surface roughness parameters assessed by confocal scanning laser microscopy were dependent on the magnification applied for their measurement. The arithmetic average roughness S-a was between 5 mu m and 10 mu m at magnification 5x and between 2.5 mu m and 10 mu m at magnification 20x. The maximum peak-to-valley height S-z confirmed the presence of open pores emerging through the coatings. The open pores constitute free pathways for water ingress through the coatings, and could explain the high water absorption of the coatings including the methysiliconate-containing silicate coating and despite the relatively high water contact angle and low wettability exhibited by this sample. The post-application of a hydrophobizing solution containing hexadecyltrimethoxysilane and dimethyloctadecyl[3-(trimethoxysilyl)propyl]ammonium chloride considerably reduced the water permeability, while application of nanosilica-containing organic primers increased the adhesion for the coatings. Silicate coatings with adhesion great enough and resistance against water damages can be generated on wood even without a primer using low silica-to-alkali ratio binders and an organosilane additive. The sol-silicate coatings appear to be applicable only with a primer. The improvement of the paint formulations to control the formation of microcracks and open pores could be useful to reduce the liquid water permeability and increase durability. Otherwise, the application of a hydrophobizing treatment can be used for this purpose.

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