It seems pretty obvious that researchers at the University of Michigan would be interested in finding a solution for keeping ice from sticking to various surfaces. For example, on your car windshield, ice is a nuisance. But on an airplane, wind turbine, oil rig, or power line, it can be downright dangerous. And removing it with current methods—usually chemical melting agents or labor-intensive scrapers and hammers—is difficult and expensive work.
But a new durable and inexpensive ice-repellent coating could change that. Thin, clear, and slightly rubbery to the touch, the spray-on formula could make ice slide off equipment, airplanes, and car windshields with only the force of gravity or a gentle breeze.
Researchers say the discovery could have major implications in industries like energy, shipping, and transportation, where ice is a constant problem in cold climates.
The coating could also lead to big energy savings in freezers, which today rely on complex and energy-hungry defrosting systems to stay frost-free. An ice-repelling coating could do the same job with zero energy consumption, making household and industrial freezers up to 20 percent more efficient.
DIAL DOWN ADHESION STRENGTH
Made of a blend of common synthetic rubbers, the formula marks a departure from earlier approaches that relied on making surfaces either very water-repellent or very slippery.
“Researchers had been trying for years to dial down ice adhesion strength with chemistry, making more and more water-repellent surfaces,” says Kevin Golovin, a doctoral student in materials science and engineering at the University of Michigan. “We’ve discovered a new knob to turn, using physics to change the mechanics of how ice breaks free from a surface.”
Led by Anish Tuteja, associate professor of materials science and engineering, researchers initially experimented with water-repelling surfaces as well, but found that they weren’t effective at shedding ice. But during those experiments, they noticed something unexpected: rubbery coatings worked best for repelling ice, even when they weren’t water-repellent. Eventually, they discovered that the ability to shed water wasn’t important at all. The rubbery coatings repelled ice because of a different phenomenon, called “interfacial cavitation.”
Two rigid surfaces—say, ice and your car windshield—can stick tightly together, requiring a great deal of force to break the bond between them. But because of interfacial cavitation, a solid material stuck to a rubbery surface behaves differently. Even a small amount of force can deform the rubbery surface, breaking the solid free.
“Nobody had explored the idea that rubberiness can reduce ice adhesion,” Tuteja says. “Ice is frozen water, so people assumed that ice-repelling surfaces had to also repel water. That was very limiting.”
The new approach makes it possible to dramatically improve durability compared to previous icephobic coatings, which relied on fragile materials that lost their ice-shedding abilities after just a few freeze-thaw cycles. The new coatings stood up to a variety of lab tests including peel tests, salt spray corrosion, high temperatures, mechanical abrasion, and hundreds of freeze-thaw cycles.
The team has also found that by slightly altering the smoothness and rubberiness of the coating, they can fine-tune its degree of ice repellency and durability. Softer surfaces tend to be more ice-repellent but less durable, while the opposite is true for harder coatings. That flexibility will allow scientists to create coatings for a huge variety of applications.
“An airplane coating, for example, would need to be extremely durable, but it could be less ice-repellent because of high winds and vibration that would help push ice off,” Golovin says.
EASY TO FINE-TUNE
“A freezer coating, on the other hand, could be less durable, but would need to shed ice with just the force of gravity and slight vibrations. The great thing about our approach is that it’s easy to fine-tune it for any given application.”
The team has already designed hundreds of ice-repelling formulas. Some are rough to the touch, some smooth; some shed water while others don’t.
“I think the first commercial application will be in linings for commercial frozen food packaging, where sticking is often a problem. We’ll probably see that within the next year,” Tuteja says. “Using this technology in places like cars and airplanes will be very complex because of the stringent durability and safety requirements, but we’re working on it.”
The University of Michigan MTRAC program, the Office of Naval Research, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and the National Science Foundation funded the work. The paper is published in the journal Science Advances.
Source: Republished from Futurity.org as a derivative work under the Attribution 4.0 International license. Original article posted to Futurity by Gabe Cherry-Michigan.
Featured Photo Credit: Evan Dougherty/Michigan Engineering
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