Designing a Network of Crystalline Polymers for a Scalable, Nonfluorinated, Healable and Amphiphobic Solid Slippery Interface
Manideepa Dhar, Avijit Das, Dibyangana Parbat, Uttam Manna
Abstract
The fluorinated-liquid infused amphiphobic slippery interfaces exhibiting superior sliding of the beaded oil/water droplets, often suffer from durability and contamination issues. Here, the ability of 1) hexagonal packing of hydrocarbon sides in a selected "comb-like" polymer and 2) its reversible phase transition at 51 °C was rationally exploited to achieve temperature-assisted rapid (<1 minute) and repetitive (50 times) self-healable amphiphobic solid-slippery coating on both planar and geometrically-complex substrates. The selected "comb-like" polymer was strategically infused in a porous, hydrophilic and thick (≈4.8 μm) polymeric coating. The resultant solid and smooth interface exhibited sliding of beaded droplets of various liquids, including droplets of water, polar (ethanol, 1-propanol, 1-hexanol, DMSO, DMF), and non-polar (decane, dodecane, diiodomethane) organic solvents, edible (vegetable oil), motor, engine (petrol, diesel, kerosene) and crude oils.