4.6 Article

An extreme environment-tolerant anti-icing coating

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE
Volume 262, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ces.2022.118010

Keywords

Anti-icing coating; Extreme environments; Amphiphilic copolymer; Nanocarbon fibers

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22078238, 21908160, 21961132005, 21621004]
  2. Tianjin Natural Science Foundation [20JCQNJC00170]

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The study developed a coating that can withstand extreme environments and has excellent anti-icing performance. It can lower the ice nucleation temperature, prolong icing delay time, and reduce ice adhesion strength.
Undesired ice accumulation on outdoor infrastructures causes serious economic and safety issues, inducing the urgent demand of anti-icing coatings. However, the outdoor equipment inevitably suffers from various extreme environments, resulting in a challenge for anti-icing coatings to maintain surface structures and material properties that directly affect anti-icing performance. Herein, we develop an anti-icing coating that can tolerate a variety of extreme environments, including ultra-low (-196 ?) or high temperature (200 ?), strong acid (pH = 0) or alkali (pH = 14), 168-h ultraviolet (-6-month sunlight) exposure, and 200-cycle sandpaper grinding. The tough coating can remain intact and maintain deicing performance owing to the incorporation of fluorinated amphiphilic copolymers and photo-thermal nanocarbon fibers in PDMS matrix. The coating can significantly decrease ice nucleation temperature (<-26 ?), increase icing delay time (-46-fold delay), and reduce ice adhesion strength (-17.7 kPa), suggesting both excellent anti-icing and energy-saving deicing performance. This coating is highly promising to outdoor anti-icing applications for universal conditions. (C) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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