JOURNAL ARTICLE

Fabrication of “Roll-off” and “Sticky” Superhydrophobic Cellulose Surfaces via Plasma Processing

Balamurali BaluVictor BreedveldDennis W. Hess

Year: 2008 Journal:   Langmuir Vol: 24 (9)Pages: 4785-4790   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Most of the artificial superhydrophobic surfaces that have been fabricated to date are not biodegradable, renewable, or mechanically flexible and are often expensive, which limits their potential applications. In contrast, cellulose, a biodegradable, renewable, flexible, inexpensive, biopolymer which is abundantly present in nature, satisfies all the above requirements, but it is not superhydrophobic. Superhydrophobicity on cellulose paper was obtained by domain-selective etching of amorphous portions of the cellulose in an oxygen plasma and subsequently coating the etched surface with a thin fluorocarbon film deposited via plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition using pentafluoroethane as a precursor. Variation of plasma treatment yielded two types of superhydrophobicity : "roll-off" (contact angle (CA), 166.7 degrees +/- 0.9 degrees ; CA hysteresis, 3.4 degrees +/- 0.1 degrees ) and "sticky" (CA, 144.8 degrees +/- 5.7 degrees ; CA hysteresis, 79.1 degrees +/- 15.8 degrees ) near superhydrophobicity. The nanometer scale roughness obtained by delineating the internal roughness of each fiber and the micrometer scale roughness which is inherent to a cellulose paper surface are robust when compared to roughened structures created by traditional polymer grafting, nanoparticle deposition, or other artificial means.

Keywords:
Contact angle Materials science Cellulose Superhydrophobic coating Nanotechnology Plasma etching Chemical engineering Fabrication Coating Lotus effect Surface roughness Surface finish Polymer Nanoparticle Micrometer Etching (microfabrication) Composite material Layer (electronics) Chemistry Organic chemistry Optics

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489
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30
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1.00
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Citation History

Topics

Surface Modification and Superhydrophobicity
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Surfaces, Coatings and Films
High voltage insulation and dielectric phenomena
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Icing and De-icing Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Aerospace Engineering
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