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Biobased superhydrophobic coating enabled by nanoparticle assembly

Understanding biobased nanocomposites is critical in fabricating high performing sustainable materials. In this study, fundamental nanoparticle assembly structures at the nanoscale are examined and correlated with the macroscale properties of coatings formulated with these structures. Nanoparticle a...

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Autores principales: Olson, Emily, Blisko, Jonathan, Du, Chuanshen, Liu, Yi, Li, Yifan, Thurber, Henry, Curtzwiler, Greg, Ren, Juan, Thuo, Martin, Yong, Xin, Jiang, Shan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9416850/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36132850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1na00296a
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author Olson, Emily
Blisko, Jonathan
Du, Chuanshen
Liu, Yi
Li, Yifan
Thurber, Henry
Curtzwiler, Greg
Ren, Juan
Thuo, Martin
Yong, Xin
Jiang, Shan
author_facet Olson, Emily
Blisko, Jonathan
Du, Chuanshen
Liu, Yi
Li, Yifan
Thurber, Henry
Curtzwiler, Greg
Ren, Juan
Thuo, Martin
Yong, Xin
Jiang, Shan
author_sort Olson, Emily
collection PubMed
description Understanding biobased nanocomposites is critical in fabricating high performing sustainable materials. In this study, fundamental nanoparticle assembly structures at the nanoscale are examined and correlated with the macroscale properties of coatings formulated with these structures. Nanoparticle assembly mechanisms within biobased polymer matrices were probed using in situ liquid-phase atomic force microscopy (AFM) and computational simulation. Furthermore, coatings formulated using these nanoparticle assemblies with biobased polymers were evaluated with regard to the hydrophobicity and adhesion after water immersion. Two biobased glycopolymers, hydroxyethyl cellulose (HEC) and hydroxyethyl starch (HES), were investigated. Their repeating units share the same chemical composition and only differ in monomer conformations (α- and β-anomeric glycosides). Unique fractal structures of silica nanoparticle assemblies were observed with HEC, while compact clusters were observed with HES. Simulation and AFM measurement suggest that strong attraction between silica surfaces in the HEC matrix induces diffusion-limited-aggregation, leading to large-scale, fractal assembly structures. By contrast, weak attraction in HES only produces reaction-limited-aggregation and small compact cluster structures. With high particle loading, the fractal structures in HEC formed a network, which enabled a waterborne formulation of superhydrophobic coating after silane treatment. The silica nanoparticle assembly in HEC was demonstrated to significantly improve adhesion, which showed minimum adhesion loss even after extended water immersion. The superior performance was only observed with HEC, not HES. The results bridge the assembly structures at the nanoscale, influenced by molecular conformation of biobased polymers, to the coating performance at the macroscopic level. Through this study we unveil new opportunities in economical and sustainable development of high-performance biobased materials.
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spelling pubmed-94168502022-09-20 Biobased superhydrophobic coating enabled by nanoparticle assembly Olson, Emily Blisko, Jonathan Du, Chuanshen Liu, Yi Li, Yifan Thurber, Henry Curtzwiler, Greg Ren, Juan Thuo, Martin Yong, Xin Jiang, Shan Nanoscale Adv Chemistry Understanding biobased nanocomposites is critical in fabricating high performing sustainable materials. In this study, fundamental nanoparticle assembly structures at the nanoscale are examined and correlated with the macroscale properties of coatings formulated with these structures. Nanoparticle assembly mechanisms within biobased polymer matrices were probed using in situ liquid-phase atomic force microscopy (AFM) and computational simulation. Furthermore, coatings formulated using these nanoparticle assemblies with biobased polymers were evaluated with regard to the hydrophobicity and adhesion after water immersion. Two biobased glycopolymers, hydroxyethyl cellulose (HEC) and hydroxyethyl starch (HES), were investigated. Their repeating units share the same chemical composition and only differ in monomer conformations (α- and β-anomeric glycosides). Unique fractal structures of silica nanoparticle assemblies were observed with HEC, while compact clusters were observed with HES. Simulation and AFM measurement suggest that strong attraction between silica surfaces in the HEC matrix induces diffusion-limited-aggregation, leading to large-scale, fractal assembly structures. By contrast, weak attraction in HES only produces reaction-limited-aggregation and small compact cluster structures. With high particle loading, the fractal structures in HEC formed a network, which enabled a waterborne formulation of superhydrophobic coating after silane treatment. The silica nanoparticle assembly in HEC was demonstrated to significantly improve adhesion, which showed minimum adhesion loss even after extended water immersion. The superior performance was only observed with HEC, not HES. The results bridge the assembly structures at the nanoscale, influenced by molecular conformation of biobased polymers, to the coating performance at the macroscopic level. Through this study we unveil new opportunities in economical and sustainable development of high-performance biobased materials. RSC 2021-05-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9416850/ /pubmed/36132850 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1na00296a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Olson, Emily
Blisko, Jonathan
Du, Chuanshen
Liu, Yi
Li, Yifan
Thurber, Henry
Curtzwiler, Greg
Ren, Juan
Thuo, Martin
Yong, Xin
Jiang, Shan
Biobased superhydrophobic coating enabled by nanoparticle assembly
title Biobased superhydrophobic coating enabled by nanoparticle assembly
title_full Biobased superhydrophobic coating enabled by nanoparticle assembly
title_fullStr Biobased superhydrophobic coating enabled by nanoparticle assembly
title_full_unstemmed Biobased superhydrophobic coating enabled by nanoparticle assembly
title_short Biobased superhydrophobic coating enabled by nanoparticle assembly
title_sort biobased superhydrophobic coating enabled by nanoparticle assembly
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9416850/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36132850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1na00296a
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