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March 30, 2006 - Updated March 31, 11:00 a.m ET
FROM THE ACS MEETING
Silsesquioxanes Bead Water For A Clean Sweep
Rough surface texture enhances hydrophobicity of fluorinated silicon-oxygen cage compounds
Stephen K. Ritter
Ultrahydrophobic materials are so water-resistant that they can induce a drop of water to bead up nearly perfectly and roll off the surface of the material.
An improved explanation for this phenomenon now is being offered by a team of chemists that has been studying ultrahydrophobic materials known as fluorinated polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (POSS) compounds. In addition to the typical water repellency and oil resistance expected from fluorinated alkyl chains, they explain, the molecular-scale surface roughness of some fluorinated Si8O12 POSS films further lowers surface tension to enhance the hydrophobicity.
IMAGE COURTESY OF ASHWANI VIJ
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SLICK CAGE The ultrahydrophobic properties of fluorinated silsesquioxanes, such as the corner-capped decyl version shown, result in part from the fluorinated alkyl substituents on the silicon-oxygen cage, but also from surface roughness, as shown in this micrograph of a spun-cast film. |
Scott T. Iacono, Wade W. Grabow, Joseph M. Mabry, and Ashwani Vij of the Air Force Research Lab at Edwards Air Force Base, in California, carried out the work. Iacono, now a graduate student in Dennis W. Smith Jr.’s group at Clemson University, discussed some of the results this week during a symposium sponsored by the Inorganic Chemistry Division at the ACS national meeting in Atlanta.
POSS compounds are silicon-oxygen cages, such as Si8O12, that have an organic substituent on each silicon atom. The compounds are commercially available as monomers or oligomers and are used as nanoparticle fillers or copolymers to reinforce organic polymers, adding to their resistance to abrasion, oxidation, and heat.
In the past few years, Mabry and his coworkers have prepared what they believe to be the first fluorinated POSS compounds. They noted that the crystalline solids are the most hydrophobic molecular materials known; only a few polymeric materials, such as poly(perfluoroethers), are slightly more hydrophobic.
In Atlanta, Iacono described one part of the research that entailed “corner-capped” fluorinated Si8O12 compounds, in which seven of the substituents are fluoropropyl groups (–CH2CH2CF3) and the remaining substituent is either a fluoropropyl or longer fluoroalkyl group or a branched fluoroalkyl group. The corner-capped compounds, although not as hydrophobic as some of the team’s other fluorinated POSS compounds, were good models to observe how molecular structure and film surface roughness influences water- and oil-resistance, Iacono said.
The compound corner-capped with a hexafluoroisobutyl group [–CH2CH(CF3)2] has a surface water-drop contact angle of 122° (180° is the maximum), about 10° greater than that of polytetrafluoroethylene. X-ray crystal structure analysis coupled with atomic force microscope images of the corner-capped compounds further showed that the arrangement of the fluoroalkyl substituents results in micrometer-scale surface features on spun-cast films, rather than smooth surfaces.
Iacono likened these surface properties to those of a lotus leaf. He noted that on smooth hydrophobic surfaces water beads up and simply rolls off, leaving behind any particulate matter. But on the self-cleaning lotus leaf, micrometer-sized wax crystalloids create a rough surface texture that reduces the surface tension enough so that when water rolls off it carries any particulate matter with it for complete cleaning. The team believes this phenomenon is at work in the fluorinated POSS compounds, giving them above-average hydrophobicity, and it could make them potentially useful in a number of applications.
The Air Force researchers still have a few cards up their sleeves regarding other fluorinated POSS compounds, and they don't want to divulge those results just yet, Vij said. Meanwhile, they are investigating blending the fluorinated POSS compounds with polymers to increase the hydrophobicity and oil resistance.
- Chemical & Engineering News
- ISSN 0009-2347
- Copyright © 2006 American Chemical Society
IMAGE COURTESY OF ASHWANI VIJ