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      Macroscopic superhydrophobicity achieved by atomic decoration with silicones

      1 , 1
      The Journal of Chemical Physics
      AIP Publishing

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          Candle soot as a template for a transparent robust superamphiphobic coating.

          Coating is an essential step in adjusting the surface properties of materials. Superhydrophobic coatings with contact angles greater than 150° and roll-off angles below 10° for water have been developed, based on low-energy surfaces and roughness on the nano- and micrometer scales. However, these surfaces are still wetted by organic liquids such as surfactant-based solutions, alcohols, or alkanes. Coatings that are simultaneously superhydrophobic and superoleophobic are rare. We designed an easily fabricated, transparent, and oil-rebounding superamphiphobic coating. A porous deposit of candle soot was coated with a 25-nanometer-thick silica shell. The black coating became transparent after calcination at 600°C. After silanization, the coating was superamphiphobic and remained so even after its top layer was damaged by sand impingement.
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            Characterization and Distribution of Water-repellent, Self-cleaning Plant Surfaces

            C Neinhuis (1997)
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              Repellent materials. Robust self-cleaning surfaces that function when exposed to either air or oil.

              Superhydrophobic self-cleaning surfaces are based on the surface micro/nanomorphologies; however, such surfaces are mechanically weak and stop functioning when exposed to oil. We have created an ethanolic suspension of perfluorosilane-coated titanium dioxide nanoparticles that forms a paint that can be sprayed, dipped, or extruded onto both hard and soft materials to create a self-cleaning surface that functions even upon emersion in oil. Commercial adhesives were used to bond the paint to various substrates and promote robustness. These surfaces maintained their water repellency after finger-wipe, knife-scratch, and even 40 abrasion cycles with sandpaper. The formulations developed can be used on clothes, paper, glass, and steel for a myriad of self-cleaning applications.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Journal of Chemical Physics
                The Journal of Chemical Physics
                AIP Publishing
                0021-9606
                1089-7690
                July 07 2018
                July 07 2018
                : 149
                : 1
                : 014706
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Beijing National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics and Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China and Collaborative Innovation Center of Quantum Matter, Beijing 100190, China
                Article
                10.1063/1.5030758
                ed7230a9-117c-4b1e-ba1d-ec44ad738f16
                © 2018
                History
                Product
                Self URI (article page): http://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/1.5030758

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