Research (Jan 2023)

Inhibition of Defect-Induced Ice Nucleation, Propagation, and Adhesion by Bioinspired Self-Healing Anti-Icing Coatings

  • Shu Tian,
  • Ruiqi Li,
  • Xinmeng Liu,
  • Jiancheng Wang,
  • Junyu Yu,
  • Sijia Xu,
  • Yunqing Tian,
  • Jing Yang,
  • Lei Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.34133/research.0140
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Anti-icing coatings on outdoor infrastructures inevitably suffer from mechanical injuries in numerous icing scenarios such as hailstorms, sandstorms, impacts of foreign objects, and icing–deicing cycles. Herein, the mechanisms of surface-defect-induced icing are clarified. At the defects, water molecules exhibit stronger adsorption and the heat transfer rate increases, accelerating the condensation of water vapor as well as ice nucleation and propagation. Moreover, the ice–defect interlocking structure increases the ice adhesion strength. Thus, a self-healing (at −20 °C) antifreeze-protein (AFP)-inspired anti-icing coating is developed. The coating is based on a design that mimics the ice-binding and non-ice-binding sites in AFPs. It enables the coating to markedly inhibit ice nucleation (nucleation temperature < −29.4 °C), prevent ice propagation (propagation rate < 0.00048 cm2/s), and reduce ice adhesion on the surface (adhesion strength < 38.9 kPa). More importantly, the coating can also autonomously self-heal at −20 °C, as a result of multiple dynamic bonds in its structure, to inhibit defect-induced icing processes. The healed coating sustains high anti-icing and deicing performance even under various extreme conditions. This work reveals the in-depth mechanism of defect-induced ice formation as well as adhesion, and proposes a self-healing anti-icing coating for outdoor infrastructures.