posted on 2024-06-25, 13:34authored byZhengyuan Li, Yizhe Liu, Yubo Liu, Kai Feng, Jing Li, Yang Wu, Feng Zhou
Icing
and fogging on optical material surfaces bring various problems
in daily life. Recently, some photothermal coatings have been reported
to prevent the condensation or freeze of water droplets by increasing
the surface temperature. However, it is a great challenge to apply
them in practical conditions due to their opaqueness and poor mechanical
wear-resistant property. In this work, we constructed a robust transparent
photothermal omniphobic coating with a simple dip-coating technique.
In the coating system, photothermal polypyrrole nanoparticles are
introduced into inorganic silica networks, and then polydimethylsiloxane
(PDMS) brushes were grafted on the inorganic silica layer to endow
the surface with omniphobicity and stain resistance. The transparency
and photothermal capacity of the coating can be regulated by the deposition
times of the coating. In addition, the coating has an excellent anti/deicing
property and reduces ice adhesion obviously due to the existence of
“liquid-like” PDMS brushes. More importantly, the coating
presents outstanding mechanical wear-resistant and self-lubricating
properties that can endure several thousand friction cycles without
performance loss. The mechanically robust photothermal omniphobic
coating gives a feasible approach to anti-icing and antifogging of
transparent substrates under sunlight irradiation.