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Self-healing, antibiofouling and anticorrosion properties enabled by designing polymers with dynamic covalent bonds and responsive linkages

Jenpob Sokjorhor, Tiwa Yimyai, Raweewan Thiramanas, Daniel Crespy

2024Journal of Materials Chemistry B19 citationsDOI

Abstract

Coating metal structures with a protective material is a popular strategy to prevent their deterioration due to corrosion. However, maintaining the barrier properties of coatings after their mechanical damage is challenging. Herein, we prepared multifunctional coatings with self-healing ability to conserve their anticorrosion performance after damage. The coating was formed by blending synthesized redox-responsive copolymers with the ability to release a corrosion inhibitor upon the onset of corrosion with synthesized self-healing polyurethanes containing disulfide bonds. The corrosion rate of steel substrates coated with a blend is approximately 24 times lower than that of steel coated with only self-healing polyurethane. An exceptional healing efficiency, as high as 95%, is obtained after mechanical damage. The antibiofouling property against bacterial and microalgal attachments on coatings is facilitated by the repellent characteristic of fluorinated segments and the biocidal activity of the inhibitor moieties in the copolymer.

Topics & Concepts

Covalent bondMaterials scienceCoatingCorrosionSelf-healingPolymerNanotechnologyMetalComposite materialMetallurgyChemistryOrganic chemistryPathologyAlternative medicineMedicineMarine Biology and Environmental ChemistryAntimicrobial agents and applicationsPolymer composites and self-healing
Self-healing, antibiofouling and anticorrosion properties enabled by designing polymers with dynamic covalent bonds and responsive linkages | Litcius