Frost Delay of a Water-Absorbing Surface with Engineered Wettability via Nonfreezing Water

Langmuir. 2022 May 10;38(18):5787-5794. doi: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.2c00369. Epub 2022 Apr 21.

Abstract

Frost is common when a solid surface is subjected to a humid and cold environment. It can cause various inconveniences, complications, or fatal accidents. Water-repellent surfaces have demonstrated an antifreezing capability by enabling the water droplets to roll or bounce off before they freeze. However, these surfaces are often limited by their inability to shed the small water condensates, which can eventually grow and freeze. Recently, surfaces that can rapidly absorb and hydrogen bond with these water condensates have demonstrated significant delay in frost formation and growth. This is attributed to a lower freezing temperature of the absorbed water which makes it stay in a nonfreezing state. Herein, we report a surface with preferential wettability of water over oil (i.e., superhydrophilic and oleophobic wettability) that can significantly delay frost formation. The surface is fabricated by copolymerizing poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA) and perfluorinated acrylate (1H,1H,2H,2H-heptadecafluorodecyl acrylate, HDF-acrylate) applied to a silane-grafted glass substrate (HDF-PEGDA). An HDF-PEGDA surface can quickly absorb condensed water which enables it to delay frost formation and growth for up to 20 min at a surface temperature of -35 °C. Also, the surface demonstrates that its frost-resistant capability remains almost unaffected even after being submerged in an oil bath due to its in-air oil repellency. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) measurements reveal that the significant quantity of absorbed water in an HDF-PEGDA surface remains in a nonfreezing state with a Tm value as low as -33 °C. A mathematical model that can predict the time at which the surface begins to be covered with frost is developed. Finally, an HDF-PEGDA is layered with a PEGDA copolymerized with sodium acrylate (Na-acrylate) that enables the continuous release of the absorbed water by posing forward osmotic pressure and regeneration of an HDF-PEGDA surface.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Acrylates* / chemistry
  • Freezing
  • Temperature
  • Water* / chemistry
  • Wettability

Substances

  • Acrylates
  • Water