Bioinspired metal–polymer thin films with varying hydrophobic properties

Date

2017-08-14

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Publisher

Springer

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Article

ISSN

1547-0091

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Citation

Rao J, Anjum SS, Craig M, Nicholls JR. (2018) Bioinspired metal–polymer thin films with varying hydrophobic properties. Journal of Coatings Technology and Research, Volume 15, Issue 1, January 2018, pp. 87-94

Abstract

Nanocomposites involve the inclusion of one material into the layers of another material at a nanoscale level. Inspired by nature, nanocomposites material systems offer functionalities over their bulk forms which in some cases have evolved over millions of years. Here, thin film coatings have been fabricated by PVD sputtering, comprising a soft PTFE phase which is combined with a hard metallic NiTi phase. A series of coatings with PTFE ranging from 10 to 75 vol% have been prepared, and their surface energies and microstructures investigated. The surface energy of the nanocomposite films changes with the PTFE content, falling in the range between PTFE and NiTi with water contact angles between 80° and 102° for a thin film with 25 and 75 vol% of PTFE, respectively. Here, both TEM and EDX reveal PTFE forming along NiTi column boundaries. Coatings with PTFE content greater than 50 vol% failed due to a build-up of intrinsic stress. The degree of hybridization between NiTi and PTFE was found to be dependent on the PTFE layer thickness. SEM analysis of this coating reveals PTFE at the surface embedded within the NiTi matrix.

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Keywords

Nanocomposites, PVD Sputtering, Thin Films, Biomimetics, Sensors, Wear

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

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