4.6 Article

Erosion Resistant Hydrophobic Coatings for Passive Ice Protection of Aircraft

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app12199589

Keywords

icing protection; hydrophobic coating; surface modifying polymer; ice adhesion strength; erosion resistance

Funding

  1. Integrated Aerial Mobility program
  2. Aerospace Future Initiative Program of the National Research Council Canada
  3. Canadian Department of National Defence-Royal Canadian Navy

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Novel slippery polyurethane coatings with high surface hydrophobicity and superior erosion resistance have been developed to protect fast moving aerodynamic structures against ice accretion. The coatings exhibit good compatibility with the polyurethane matrix and provide effective surface hydrophobicity and slipperiness, resulting in low ice adhesion strength and low erosion rates.
Novel polymeric coatings, namely slippery polyurethane (SPU) coatings, with high surface hydrophobicity and superior erosion resistance against high speed solid particles and water droplets were successfully developed to protect the leading edge of fast moving aerodynamic structures, such as aircraft wings and rotor blades, against ice accretion. The coatings comprise newly synthesized surface-modifying polymers (SMPs) bearing fluorinated and polydimethylsiloxane branches at a loading level of 1-5 wt.%, based on the total resin solid, which showed good compatibility with the erosion-resistant polyurethane matrix (PU-R) and rendered effective surface hydrophobicity and slipperiness to the coatings, as evidenced by the high water contact angles of 100-115 degrees. The coatings can be easily be sprayed or solution cast and cured at ambient temperature to provide highly durable thin coating films. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) investigation showed concentration of fluorine on the surface. The presence of 1-5 wt.% of SMPs in the polyurethane matrix slightly reduced the tensile modulus but had no significant impact on the tensile strength. All coating films exhibited good thermal stability with no material softening or degradation after heating at 121 degrees C for 24 h. DSC heating scans revealed no thermal transitions in the temperature range of -80 degrees C to 200 degrees C. Ice adhesion strength (IAS) tests using a static push rig in a cold room of -14 degrees C showed IAS as low as 220 kPa for the SPU coatings, which is much lower than that of PU-R (i.e., about 620 kPa). Sand erosion tests using 50 mu m angular alumina particles at an impinging speed of 150 m/s and an impinging angle of 30 degrees revealed very low erosion rates of ca. 100 mu g/g sand for the coatings. Water droplet erosion tests at 175 m/s using 463 mu m droplets with 42,000 impingements every minute showed no significant coating removal after 20 min of testing. The combination of the high surface hydrophobicity, low ice adhesion strength and superior erosion resistance makes the SPU coatings attractive for ice protection of aircraft structures, where the coatings' erosion durability is of paramount importance.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available