Superhydrophobic surface modification of nanostructured textile surfaces

A recent study focuses on initiated chemical vapor deposition of poly(hexafluorobutyl acrylate) thin films for superhydrophobic surface modification of nanostructured textile surfaces.

A chemist in a laboratory as a symbolic image.
Polyester and cotton fabrics were made superhydrophobic after conformal coating of PHFBA by iCVD. Image source: pressmaster – stock.adobe.com (symbol image). -

The study demonstrates the synthesis of poly(hexafluorobutyl acrylate) (PHFBA) thin films on textile substrates using initiated chemical vapor deposition (iCVD) method.

Owing to its short perfluoroalkyl functional group, PHFBA is a suitable low-surface-energy finish that can be used for hydrophobic functionalisation of textile surfaces. During iCVD of PHFBA, the use of initiator helped to achieve deposition rates up to 83 nm/min, which is nearly twice that achieved by PECVD.

Very high water contact angles

FTIR and XPS analyses of as-deposited films showed very high retention of carbonyl and perfluoroalkyl functionalities. Polyester and cotton fabrics were made superhydrophobic after conformal coating of PHFBA by iCVD. The decoration of fabric surfaces by SiO2 nanoparticles prior to the iCVD coating helped to create composite structures having dual-scale roughness. The final SiO2-treated and iCVD-PHFBA-coated textile fabrics showed very high water contact angles (> 165°).

The study has been published in Journal of Coatings Technology and Research volume 17 (2020).

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