We illustrate several methodologies to produce superhydrophobic metal surfaces and to explore their durability and anti-icing properties.
Several ways to produce superhydrophobic metal surfaces are presented in this work. Aluminum was chosen as the metal substrate due to its wide use in industry. The wettability of the produced surface was analyzed by bouncing drop experiments and the topography was analyzed by confocal microscopy. In addition, we show various methodologies to measure its durability and anti-icing properties. Superhydrophobic surfaces hold a special texture that must be preserved to keep their water-repellency. To fabricate durable surfaces, we followed two strategies to incorporate a resistant texture. The first strategy is a direct incorporation of roughness to the metal substrate by acid etching. After this surface texturization, the surface energy was decreased by silanization or fluoropolymer deposition. The second strategy is the growth of a ceria layer (after surface texturization) that should enhance the surface hardness and corrosion resistance. The surface energy was decreased with a stearic acid film.
The durability of the superhydrophobic surfaces was examined by a particle impact test, mechanical wear by lateral abrasion, and UV-ozone resistance. The anti-icing properties were explored by studying the ability to repeal subcooled water, freezing delay, and ice adhesion.
The ability of superhydrophobic (SH) surfaces to repel water is the reason that they are traditionally proposed as a solution to prevent icing1,2. However, there are concerns about the suitability of SH surfaces for anti-icing agents: 1) the high costs of production, 2) that superhydrophobicity does not always lead to ice-phobicity3, and 3) the questionable durability of the SH surfaces4. Superhydrophobic surfaces hold two properties related to their topography and chemical composition5: they are rough, with particular topographic features; and their surface energy is low (intrinsically hydrophobic).
The roughness on a hydrophobic surface serves to reduce the ratio between the real solid-liquid area and the apparent contact area. The water is not fully in contact with the solid due to the lotus effect6,7, when the drop rests or moves onto the surface asperities. In this scenario, the solid-liquid interface acts heterogeneously with two chemical domains: the solid surface itself and the tiny air-bubbles trapped between the solid and water8. The degree of water repellency is connected to the amount of trapped air because the air patches are smooth and its intrinsic contact angle is 180°. Some studies report the incorporation of a hierarchical surface texture with micro and nano-asperities as the optimal strategy to provide better water-repellent properties (greater presence of air at the solid-liquid interface)9. For some metals, a low-cost strategy to create two-level roughness features is acid-etching10,11. This procedure is frequently used in industry. With certain acid concentrations and etching times, the metal surface reveals the proper hierarchical roughness. In general, the surface roughening is optimized by varying the acid concentration, etching time, or both12. The surface energy of metals is high and for this reason, the fabrication of water-repellent metal surfaces requires later hydrophobization.
Hydrophobization is generally achieved by hydrophobic film deposition using different methods: silanization10,13, dip-coating14, spin-coating15, spraying16 or plasma-deposition17. Silanization has been proposed18 as one of the most promising tool for improving the low durability of SH surfaces. Unlike other deposition techniques, the silanization process is based on a covalent bond between the Si-OH groups with the surface hydroxyl groups of the metal substrate10. A drawback of the silanization process is the need for previous activation of the metal substrate to create enough hydroxyl groups for a high degree of coverage and uniformity. Another strategy recently proposed to produce resistant superhydrophobic surfaces is the use of rare-earth coatings19,20. Ceria coatings have two properties that justify this use: they can be intrinsically hydrophobic21, and they are mechanically and chemically robust. In particular, one of the most important reasons why they are chosen as protective coatings is their corrosion-protection abilities20.
To produce long-lasting SH metal surfaces, two issues are considered: the surface texture must not be damaged, and the hydrophobic film/coating must be firmly anchored to the substrate. Surfaces are typically exposed to wear originated by lateral abrasion or particle impact4. If the asperities are damaged, the water-repellency may be substantially reduced. Under extreme environments, the hydrophobic coating may be partially removed from the surface or may be chemically degraded by UV exposure, humidity or corrosion. The design of durable SH surfaces coatings is an important challenge for coating and surface engineering.
For metals, one of the most demanding requirements is that the anti-icing ability is based on three interconnected aspects22 as illustrated in Figure 1: subcooled water repellency, freezing delay, and low ice-adhesion. Outdoor icing occurs when subcooled water, typically rain drops, comes into contact with a solid surface and is rapidly frozen by heterogeneous nucleation23. The formed ice (rime) is firmly attached to the surface. Thus, the first step to avoid icing is to reduce the solid-water contact time. If the surface is superhydrophobic, rain drops may be expelled from the surface before freezing. In addition, it has been proven that, under humid conditions, surfaces with a high contact angle delay freezing more efficiently than those ones with a low contact angle24. For these two reasons, SH surfaces are the most appropriate surfaces to mitigate icing. However, the lifetime of superhydrophobic surfaces may be a key point since icing conditions are typically aggressive25. Some studies have concluded that SH surfaces are not the best choice for decreasing ice adhesion26. Once the ice forms on the surface, it stays firmly attached due to surface asperities. The roughness increases the ice-surface contact area and the asperities act as interlocking agents26. The use of durable SH surfaces is recommended to avoid icing if there are no traces of ice already present on the surface.
In this work, we present several protocols to produce durable SH surfaces on metal substrates. We use aluminum (Al) as the substrate because it is widely used in industry, and the incorporation of anti-icing properties is particularly relevant for certain applications (ski resorts facilities, aeronautics, etc.). We prepare three types of surfaces: a textured Al surface coated with a fluoropolymer coating, a textured Al surface silanized with a fluorosilane, and a ceria-stearic acid bilayer on an Al substrate. Similar techniques17,27,28,29 provide 100-300 nm film thicknesses or even monolayer films. For each surface, we measured their wetting properties and conducted wear tests. Finally, we analyzed their anti-icing performance by using three tests aimed to probe independently the three properties shown in Figure 1.
Our protocol is based on the scheme shown in Figure 2. Once the SH Al surfaces are prepared, their wetting properties and topography are analyzed to determine their repellency properties and roughness features. The wetting properties are analyzed by bouncing drop experiments, which is a technique connected to the water tensile adhesion. Since the observation of drop bounces is required, this technique is only suitable for superhydrophobic surfaces13. For each surface treatment, we prepared at least four samples to conduct the anti-icing tests and another four samples to perform the durability tests. The damage caused after each durability test was analyzed by measuring the loss of wetting properties and roughness features. Similar durability tests to the proposed ones in this work were recently used for other metal surfaces27,30.
Concerning the anti-icing tests, the aim of this study is to determine whether the use of the produced SH Al surfaces are convenient as anti-icing agents. Hence, we analyzed, for comparison, the performance of two control samples: a) an untreated Al sample (smooth hydrophilic sample) and b) a hydrophobized but not textured sample (smooth hydrophobic sample). For the same purpose, the use of a textured but not hydrophobized surface might be of interest. Unfortunately, this surface is extremely wettable and anti-icing tests cannot be carried out for them.
Note: The protocol follows the scheme shown in Figure 2.
1. Sample Preparation
2. Sample Characterization
3. Durability Tests
Note: Evaluate the damage induced by each wear agent separately. Do not conduct more than one wear test per sample.
4. Anti-icing Efficiency Evaluation
Note: The anti-icing efficiency evaluation is based on the three aspects shown in Figure 1.
The wetting and roughness properties of the SH surfaces that were used in this study are shown in Figure 5. The average number of bounces measured for each sample is displayed in Figure 5a and the average roughness is shown in Figure 5b. There is no correlation between the roughness and wetting properties. The number of bounces measured for the polytetrafluoroethylene coated sample agrees with the Ce-SA sample. However, the Ce-SA sample is clearly rougher (~40% greater Ra value). In contrast, the Ra value for the FAS-17 sample is very similar to the polytetrafluoroethylene, while their wetting properties are clearly different.
In Figure 6 we analyzed the effect on the wetting properties of three durability tests: the lateral abrasion test (Figure 6a), the particle impact test (Figure 6b) and UV-ozone exposure (Figure 6c). All the SH samples showed poor mechanical resistance, because they lose their water repellency properties after 2 cycles.
Concerning the UV-ozone test, we noted that the polytetrafluoroethylene coating remained unaltered after several cycles, while the rest of the surfaces were clearly damaged by at least one of these wear agents. All the surfaces showed a good resistance to prolonged water exposure (without change in their sliding angles). Due to their irrelevance, these results are not shown here.
The first anti-icing test conducted was the subcooled water repellency test. We observed that all the SH surfaces behaved very efficiently, avoiding ice accretion after subcooled water dripping for more than 12 hours. These results are drastically different than those ones obtained for the uncoated aluminum sample, for which the ice accretion occurred only 180 s after the beginning of the dripping process. The smooth-hydrophobic aluminum surface showed better results than the uncoated sample, but still much worse than the SH surfaces (ice accretion after 3 h).
Concerning the freezing delay tests, we could not observe remarkable differences between the three SH surfaces used in this study. However, we found important differences between the SH surfaces and the smooth (hydrophobized and uncoated) surfaces. Under dry conditions (low RH), the surface that delays freezing longer is the smooth-uncoated aluminum surface (Figure 7a), while at humid conditions (high RH), the SH surfaces delay freezing more efficiently than the smooth one (Figure 7b).
Results for the ice adhesion tests are shown in Figure 8. They show that the SH surfaces are unable to reduce shear (Figure 8a) and tensile ice adhesion (Figure 8b). Ice adhesion for the Ce-SA coating was clearly higher than the rest. These results reveal that the roughness enhances the ice adhesion.
Figure 1. Three facets needed for anti-icing performance. Subcooled water repellency, freezing delay, and low shear/tensile ice adhesion. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Scheme of the protocol followed in this work to fabricate and analyze the performance of superhydrophobic surfaces. First, the surfaces are prepared. Second, their wetting and roughness properties are analyzed, next durability, and, finally, their anti-icing efficiency. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Mechanical durability tests. (a) Lateral abrasion test. (b) Particle impact test (erosion). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4. Anti-icing performance tests. (a) Subcooled water dripping test. (b) Freezing delay test. (c) Ice adhesion test Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5. Water tensile adhesion and roughness properties of the superhydrophobic surfaces fabricated for this study. The water tensile adhesion is parametrized by (a) the number of bounces of a 4 µL water drop released over the sample and (b) the roughness by the roughness amplitude Ra. Error bars in (a) and (b) show the variability (standard deviation) within the same sample after conducting 3 bouncing drop experiments and after acquiring at least 4 single topographies, respectively. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6. Sliding angle versus the number of cycles for each durability test. (a) Lateral abrasion test. (b) Particle impact. (c) UV-ozone. The error bars show the variability (standard deviation) after studying the dynamic of three sliding drops on each sample and for each wear condition.
Figure 7. Freezing delay tests. Tests were conducted on a smooth-hydrophobic aluminum surface (fluoropolymer film coated) and a superhydrophobic surface (etched and fluoropolymer film coated) at (a) dry conditions (RH~40%) and (b) humid conditions (RH~95%). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 8. Ice adhesion quantified by peak force and adhesion strength. (a) Shear-adhesion tests. (b) Tensile adhesion tests. We studied the three superhydrophobic surfaces of this study and further analyzed a smooth-hydrophobized (fluoropolymer film coated) aluminum sample and an untreated aluminum sample, for comparison. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
In this paper, we demonstrate strategies to produce water-repellent surfaces on aluminum substrates. In addition, we show methods to characterize their wetting properties, roughness, durability and anti-icing performance.
To prepare the SH surfaces, we used two strategies. The first strategy incorporated the proper roughness degree to achieve the intrinsic hierarchical structure of SH surfaces by acid etching. This process is particularly critical, which may require further work for other metals or aluminum substrates with different composition. Searching for the proper etching conditions may be an issue and typically requires a scanning of the etching time or acid concentrations. Acid etching is limited only to metal surfaces that are soluble in acid solutions or uncoated surfaces. In this work, we etched the substrate in HCl and later hydrophobized it with a fluoropolymer coating deposition or silanization (FAS-17), accordingly. The second strategy used a ceria coating that incorporates the roughness properties. This coating was deposited by immersion of the etched Al substrate.
The wetting response of the three coatings was examined with bouncing drop experiments. This technique is a significant improvement with respect to existing techniques for analyzing the wetting properties of superhydrophobic surfaces. The higher water repellency was obtained for the surfaces coated with fluoropolymer and Ce-SA, while the lowest repellency was achieved with FAS-17. The roughness degree of both the polytetrafluoroethylene and FAS-17 samples (Ra~4 µm) is very similar because the texturization protocol was the same. However, we expect a higher degree of coverage for the polytetrafluoroethylene coated sample, as confirmed in a previous study13. The sample coated with Ce-SA was the roughest, but its water repellency was comparable to the polytetrafluoroethylene samples. This suggests that roughness in not necessary beneficial above a certain degree or roughness. The three SH surfaces showed poor mechanical durability. The Ce-SA samples showed a remarkably better resistance to shear abrasion than the rest (Figure 6a). Otherwise, all the SH surfaces showed very similar degradation after the sand-abrasion wear test. The surface coated with polytetrafluoroethylene resisted the UV-ozone wear test very efficiently. This might be connected to the high chemical stability of polytetrafluoroethylene36. All the SH surfaces showed good resistance to prolonged water exposure. Concerning the anti-icing performance, we concluded that the SH surfaces are very efficient as a subcooled water repellent, since no ice accretion was observed after more than 12 hours under constant water-dripping and further as freezing delayers at humid conditions (Figure 7b). This observation is in good agreement with previous results24. However, the ice adhesion tests revealed an unsatisfactory performance of the SH surfaces in comparison to the control smooth samples used for this test (uncoated and hydrophobized). Our results confirmed that the roughness enhances noticeably the ice adhesion (Figure 8), which is in good agreement with previous observations26. Affecting subcooled water and high humidity are environmental conditions typical for icing. However, if ice is inexorably formed on the surface, the ice removal from SH surfaces might be a very difficult task. Other alternatives (elastomeric coatings or slippery surfaces, for instance) that are not superhydrophobic surfaces are proposed for anti-icing applications. The techniques presented in this work to evaluate both the durability and anti-icing properties may be similarly used to compare the anti-icing efficiency of these surfaces.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This research was supported by the projects: MAT2014-60615-R and MAT2017-82182-R funded by the State Research Agency (SRA) and European Regional Development Fund (ERDF).
Hydrochloric acid, 37% | SICAL, S.A. | AC07411000 | used for acid etching |
1H,1H,2H,2H-Perfluorodecyltriethoxysilane, 97% | Sigma-Aldrich | 658758 | used for silanization with FAS-17 |
Dupont AF1600 | Dupont | D10389631 | used for fluropolymer deposition |
FC-72 | 3M, Fluorinet | 1100-2-93 | used for fluropolymer deposition (flurocarbon solvent) |
Cerium(III) chloride heptahydrate, 99.9% | Sigma-Aldrich | 228931 | used for Ceria coating deposition |
Hydrogen peroxide solution, 30% | Sigma-Aldrich | H1009 | used for Ceria coating deposition |
Stearic acid, ≥98.5% | Sigma-Aldrich | S4751 | used for Ceria coating deposition |
Ethanol | SICAL, S.A. | 16271 | used throughout |
Acetone | SICAL, S.A. | 1090 | used throughout |
Aluminum sheets 0.5mm | MODULOR (Germany) | 125993 | substrates used throught |
Micro-90 concentrated cleaning solution | Sigma-Aldrich | Z281506 | |
Ultra pure Milli-Q water | Millipore | discontinued | used throughout |
Plasma Etcher/Asher/Cleaner EMITECH K1050X | Aname | K1500XDEV-001 | used throughout |
PCC software | AMETEK | discontinued | sofware controlling the high speed camera Phantom MIRO 4 |
High Speed Camera Phantom Miro 4 | AMETEK | discontinued | used for bouncing drop experiments |
Open Loop PLµ 2.32 | UPC-CD6 & Sensofar Tech S.L. | version 2.32 | Sofware controlling PLµ Confocal Imaging Profiler |
Plµ-Confocal Imaging Profiler 2300 | Sensofar Tech S.L. | discontinued | used for roughness measurements |
TABER 5750 LINEAL ABRASER | TABER | 5750 | used for lateral abrasion tests |
Abbrasive sand: ASTM 20-30 SAND C778 | U.S. SILICA COMPANY (USA) | 1-800-635-7263 | used for abrasive partcile impact tests |
Ozone cleaner: PSDP-UV4T, Digital UV Ozone System | Novascam | discontinued | UV-ozone degradation test |
Peristalitic Pump GILSON 312, France | GILSON (France) | discontinued | used for water dripping test |
Nylon thread | Dracon fishing line, Izorline internacional, inc. (USA) | discontinued | used for ice adhesion tests |
Digital force gauge (ZTA-200N, ZTA Series | IMADA (USA) | 370199 | used for ice adhesion tests |
Motorized test stand I, MH2-500N-FA | IMADA (USA) | 366942 | used for ice adhesion tests |
Force Recorder Professional | IMADA (USA) | version 1.0.2 | software provided by IMADA to register the force |
HYGROCLIP XD – STANDARD PROBE | Rotronic | discontinued | Temperature and humidity probe |
HW3 Lite software | Rotronic | version 2.1.2 | Sofware controlling the HYGROCLIP Probe |