Anti-icing
superhydrophobic surfaces have attracted tremendous
interests due to their repellency to water and extremely low ice affinity,
whereas the weak durability has been the bottleneck for further applications.
Surface durability is especially important in long-term exposure to
low-temperature and high-humidity environments. In this study, a robust
micro–nano-nanowire triple structure-held PDMS superhydrophobic
surface was fabricated via a hybrid process: ultrafast-laser-prepared
periodic copper microstructures were chemically oxidized, followed
by modification of PDMS. The hedgehog-like surface structure was composed
of microcones, densely grown nanowires, and tightly combined PDMS.
The capillary force difference in micro–nanostructures drove
PDMS solutions to distribute evenly, bonding fragile nanowires to
form stronger composite cones. PDMS replaced the commonly used fragile
fluorosilanes and protected nanowires from breaking, which endowed
the surfaces with higher robustness. The ductile PDMS–nanowire
composites possessed higher resiliency than brittle nanowires under
a load of 1 mN. The surface kept superhydrophobic and ice-resistant
after 15 linear abrasion cycles under 1.2 kPa or 60 icing–deicing
cycles under −20 °C or 500 tape peeling cycles. Under
a higher pressure of 6.2 kPa, the contact angle (CA) was maintained
above 150° until the abrasion distance exceeded 8 m. In addition,
the surface exhibited a rare spontaneously optimized performance in
the icing–deicing cycles. The ice adhesion strength of the
surface reached its lowest value of 12.2 kPa in the 16th cycle. Evolution
of surface roughness and morphology were combined to explain its unique
U-shaped performance curves, which distinguished its unique degradation
process from common surfaces. Thus, this triple-scale superhydrophobic
surface showed a long-term anti-icing performance with high deicing
robustness and low ice adhesion strength. The proposed nanostructure-facilitated
uniform distribution strategy of PDMS is promising in future design
of durable superhydrophobic anti-icing surfaces.