Development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection

With increasing focus on sustainable and environment friendly solutions for day-to-day applications, several new technologies are being developed or existing ones are being improved upon. Self-cleaning coatings and surfaces is one such area which is getting constant attention from today’s scientific...

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Main Author: Kumar, Divya
Other Authors: Li Lin
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/65941
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-65941
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Materials
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Materials
Kumar, Divya
Development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection
description With increasing focus on sustainable and environment friendly solutions for day-to-day applications, several new technologies are being developed or existing ones are being improved upon. Self-cleaning coatings and surfaces is one such area which is getting constant attention from today’s scientific and industrial community. These coatings can effectively reduce cleaning and maintenance requirements and also prevent unwarranted damage and failure of machines or structures due to surface contamination. There are several ways to introduce self-cleaning functionality to a surface viz. photocatalytic, superhydrophilic or superhydrophobic methods. This project mainly concentrates on the development of different superhydrophobic coatings that can be applied on a surface to make it self-cleaning. A surface that is superhydrophobic possesses a water contact angle (CA) > 150° and low sliding angles (SA). The main principle behind superhydrophobicity is that the surfaces with this functionality have high resistance to wetting. Typically the formulation of these coatings contains use of soft polymer blocks and various organic surface modifiers. This in turn compromises the mechanical durability of the coatings when exposed to harsh environments. The main objective of this project is to develop self-cleaning coatings for large outdoor structures like wind turbine blades and aircraft wings with enhanced mechanical properties. The project aims to achieve this through understanding the main factors affecting the key functionalities of abrasion and erosion resistant self-cleaning coatings. Further, there are no standardized test methods to evaluate the effectiveness of such coatings. This project also aims at developing basic tests to evaluate the performance of various self-cleaning systems. This work includes formulation, synthesis, characterization and mechanical testing of three different coating systems. The first system was based on a sol-gel formulation for producing an organic-inorganic matrix using a silane, tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) and an epoxy silane, glycidoxypropyltriethoxylsilane (Glymo). The hydrophobic functionality was introduced by addition of low energy molecules like fluoroalkylsilanes and particulate silica fillers. Though this system yielded coatings that exhibited a combination of contact angle > 150° and sliding angle < 5°, the mechanical durability, erosion and abrasion resistance were not extremely high. In order to further improve the mechanical properties of this system, amine cured Glymo was used. This modification produced coatings that showed improved mechanical resistance compared to the previous composition. The second system also involves TEOS as a precursor along with the viscoelastic polymer polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) acting as the hydrophobic agent. The PDMS due to its Si-O-Si network also contributed to the formation of the matrix along with TEOS. At a particular composition, these coatings exhibited dynamic hydrophobicity (i.e.) sliding of water droplets at angles < 10° even though the contact angle of these coatings were not > 150°. These coatings also proved to possess satisfactory mechanical properties and resistance to abrasion and erosion which is attributed mainly to the presence of the viscoelastic polymer PDMS. On adding particulate silica fillers (10-20 nm) to the coating, they moved from being dynamically hydrophobic to superhydrophobic. The final coating system studied was based on the thermoplastic fluoropolymer polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF). PVDF is hydrophobic by itself but modification with particulate fillers produced coatings that were extremely superhydrophobic. Previous literature indicates that most PVDF based coatings do not have good adhesion with the substrates. This was addressed by pre-treating the substrates with (3 Aminopropyl)triethoxysilane (APTES) which functionalizes the surface, improving coating adhesion significantly. Increasing filler concentration improves the hardness of the coatings though the Young’s modulus decreases. The resistance to abrasive wear and erosion is seen to decrease with increase in filler concentration. Superhydrophobic functionalities of the coatings are retained after abrasion and erosion. A test was developed to measure the self-cleaning performance of the coatings. The principle of spectrophotometry was used to establish the extent of self-cleaning performance shown by various coatings. An artificial dirt mixture prepared in the lab was used to test the self-cleaning performance. In order to establish which factors influence the self-cleaning performance of the coatings, the effect of various physical properties including CA, SA, roughness, interfacial surface energy, the work of adhesion and retention force were studied. In conclusion, three different coating compositions with hydrophobic/superhydrophobic properties were developed. The various coating compositions were studied in detail for their mechanical properties and the effect of abrasive and erosive wear. Correlation between the physical parameters and self-cleaning performance of the coatings were established. A new method to systematically measure the self-cleaning performance of coatings is described and tested. From the various systems studied, it is seen that a balance between mechanical performance and hydrophobicity can be achieved by effective optimization of surface and chemical modification. This study opens a new avenue which shows that superhydrophobicity is not always necessary to achieve effective self-cleaning properties.
author2 Li Lin
author_facet Li Lin
Kumar, Divya
format Theses and Dissertations
author Kumar, Divya
author_sort Kumar, Divya
title Development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection
title_short Development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection
title_full Development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection
title_fullStr Development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection
title_full_unstemmed Development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection
title_sort development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/65941
_version_ 1759857599761612800
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-659412023-03-04T16:39:44Z Development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection Kumar, Divya Li Lin Chen Zhong School of Materials Science & Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Materials With increasing focus on sustainable and environment friendly solutions for day-to-day applications, several new technologies are being developed or existing ones are being improved upon. Self-cleaning coatings and surfaces is one such area which is getting constant attention from today’s scientific and industrial community. These coatings can effectively reduce cleaning and maintenance requirements and also prevent unwarranted damage and failure of machines or structures due to surface contamination. There are several ways to introduce self-cleaning functionality to a surface viz. photocatalytic, superhydrophilic or superhydrophobic methods. This project mainly concentrates on the development of different superhydrophobic coatings that can be applied on a surface to make it self-cleaning. A surface that is superhydrophobic possesses a water contact angle (CA) > 150° and low sliding angles (SA). The main principle behind superhydrophobicity is that the surfaces with this functionality have high resistance to wetting. Typically the formulation of these coatings contains use of soft polymer blocks and various organic surface modifiers. This in turn compromises the mechanical durability of the coatings when exposed to harsh environments. The main objective of this project is to develop self-cleaning coatings for large outdoor structures like wind turbine blades and aircraft wings with enhanced mechanical properties. The project aims to achieve this through understanding the main factors affecting the key functionalities of abrasion and erosion resistant self-cleaning coatings. Further, there are no standardized test methods to evaluate the effectiveness of such coatings. This project also aims at developing basic tests to evaluate the performance of various self-cleaning systems. This work includes formulation, synthesis, characterization and mechanical testing of three different coating systems. The first system was based on a sol-gel formulation for producing an organic-inorganic matrix using a silane, tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS) and an epoxy silane, glycidoxypropyltriethoxylsilane (Glymo). The hydrophobic functionality was introduced by addition of low energy molecules like fluoroalkylsilanes and particulate silica fillers. Though this system yielded coatings that exhibited a combination of contact angle > 150° and sliding angle < 5°, the mechanical durability, erosion and abrasion resistance were not extremely high. In order to further improve the mechanical properties of this system, amine cured Glymo was used. This modification produced coatings that showed improved mechanical resistance compared to the previous composition. The second system also involves TEOS as a precursor along with the viscoelastic polymer polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) acting as the hydrophobic agent. The PDMS due to its Si-O-Si network also contributed to the formation of the matrix along with TEOS. At a particular composition, these coatings exhibited dynamic hydrophobicity (i.e.) sliding of water droplets at angles < 10° even though the contact angle of these coatings were not > 150°. These coatings also proved to possess satisfactory mechanical properties and resistance to abrasion and erosion which is attributed mainly to the presence of the viscoelastic polymer PDMS. On adding particulate silica fillers (10-20 nm) to the coating, they moved from being dynamically hydrophobic to superhydrophobic. The final coating system studied was based on the thermoplastic fluoropolymer polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF). PVDF is hydrophobic by itself but modification with particulate fillers produced coatings that were extremely superhydrophobic. Previous literature indicates that most PVDF based coatings do not have good adhesion with the substrates. This was addressed by pre-treating the substrates with (3 Aminopropyl)triethoxysilane (APTES) which functionalizes the surface, improving coating adhesion significantly. Increasing filler concentration improves the hardness of the coatings though the Young’s modulus decreases. The resistance to abrasive wear and erosion is seen to decrease with increase in filler concentration. Superhydrophobic functionalities of the coatings are retained after abrasion and erosion. A test was developed to measure the self-cleaning performance of the coatings. The principle of spectrophotometry was used to establish the extent of self-cleaning performance shown by various coatings. An artificial dirt mixture prepared in the lab was used to test the self-cleaning performance. In order to establish which factors influence the self-cleaning performance of the coatings, the effect of various physical properties including CA, SA, roughness, interfacial surface energy, the work of adhesion and retention force were studied. In conclusion, three different coating compositions with hydrophobic/superhydrophobic properties were developed. The various coating compositions were studied in detail for their mechanical properties and the effect of abrasive and erosive wear. Correlation between the physical parameters and self-cleaning performance of the coatings were established. A new method to systematically measure the self-cleaning performance of coatings is described and tested. From the various systems studied, it is seen that a balance between mechanical performance and hydrophobicity can be achieved by effective optimization of surface and chemical modification. This study opens a new avenue which shows that superhydrophobicity is not always necessary to achieve effective self-cleaning properties. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (MSE) 2016-02-01T09:02:53Z 2016-02-01T09:02:53Z 2016 Thesis Kumar, D. (2016). Development of mechanically robust self-cleaning coatings for large structure protection. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/65941 10.32657/10356/65941 en 178 p. application/pdf