4.8 Article

Hydrogel-Anchored Fe-Based Amorphous Coatings with Integrated Antifouling and Anticorrosion Functionality

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 15, Issue 10, Pages 13644-13655

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.3c00227

Keywords

Fe-based amorphous coating; hydrogel; adhesion strength; anticorrosion; antifouling

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A hydrogel-anchored amorphous (HAM) coating with satisfactory antifouling and anticorrosion performance was designed in this study. The coating exhibited exceptional antifouling properties, achieving high resistance to algae and mussels, as well as excellent biocorrosion resistance against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The HAM coating also showed outstanding anticorrosion performance in a marine field test. This work presents a novel methodology for designing marine protective coatings with excellent antifouling and anticorrosion properties.
Biofouling and corrosion of underwater equipment induced by marine organisms have become major issues in the marine industry. The superior corrosion resistance of Fe-based amorphous coatings makes them suitable for marine applications; however, they have a poor antifouling ability. In this work, a hydrogel-anchored amorphous (HAM) coating with satisfactory antifouling and anticorrosion performance is designed, utilizing an interfacial engineering strategy involving micropatterning, surface hydroxylation, and a dopamine intermediate layer to increase the adhesion strength between the hydrogel layer and the amorphous coating. The as-obtained HAM coating exhibits exceptional antifouling properties, achieving 99.8% resistance to algae, 100% resistance to mussels, and excellent biocorrosion resistance against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Antifouling and anticorrosion performance of the HAM coating was also explored by conducting a marine field test in the East China Sea, and no signs of corrosion and fouling are observed after 1 month of immersion. It is revealed that the outstanding antifouling properties stem from the killing-resisting-camouflaging trinity that resists organism attachment across different length scales, and the excellent anticorrosion performance originates from the remarkable barrier of the amorphous coating against Cl- ion diffusion and microbe-induced biocorrosion. This work presents a novel methodology for designing marine protective coating with excellent antifouling and anticorrosion properties.

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