posted on 2023-01-23, 14:09authored byChanghao Chen, Peixun Fan, Dongyu Zhu, Ze Tian, Huanyu Zhao, Lizhong Wang, Rui Peng, Minlin Zhong
Reducing unfavorable ice accretion on surfaces exposed
in cold
environment requires effective passive anti-icing/deicing techniques.
Icephobic surfaces are widely applied on various infrastructures due
to their low ice adhesion strength and flexibility, whereas their
poor mechanical durability, common liquid infusion, weak resistance
to contamination, and low bonding strength to substrates are the major
remaining challenges. According to the fracture mechanics of ice layer,
initiating cracks at the ice-solid interfaces via the proper design
of internal structures of icephobic materials is a promising way to
icephobicity. Herein, a crack initiating icephobic surface with porous
PDMS sponges sandwiched between a protective, dense PDMS layer and
a textured metal microstructure was proposed and fabricated. The combination
of high- and low- stiffness PDMS layers anchored by the structured
metal surface give the sandwich-like structure excellent icephobicity
with both high durability and low ice adhesion (5.3 kPa in the icing–deicing
cycles). The porosity and the elastic modulus of the PDMS sponges
and the periodicity of the metal surface structures can both be tailored
to realize enhanced icephobicity. The sandwich-like icephobic surface
remained insignificantly changed under solid particle impacting and
the durability characterized via linear abrasion tests was elevated
compared with PDMS coating on flat metal surfaces. Additionally, the
trilayer icephobic surface possesses durability, low ice adhesion
strength, and improved resistance to contamination and is applicable
on various surfaces.