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Two-Dimensional Nanostrips of Hydrophobic Copper Tetradecanoate for Making Self-Cleaning Glasses.

Authors :
Sarkar, Subhrangsu
Mukherjee, Indrani
Chatterjee, Sriparna
Gohil, Smita
Singh, Bimal P.
Ayyub, Pushan
Source :
Journal of Nanomaterials. 3/24/2016, p1-7. 7p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We report a simple, solution-based technique for coating arbitrary surfaces with thin layers of self-assembled copper tetradecanoate (CTD) nanostrips, resulting in an optically transparent, superhydrophobic coating. The nanostrip-coated surfaces show water contact angles close to 150° and roll-off angles as small as 2°-3°. Importantly, CTD retains its hydrophobic nature even after annealing the self-assembled nanostrips at 200°C, which does not alter the crystal structure but “melts” the surface microstructure. This clearly indicates that the hydrophobicity in CTD is likely to be intrinsic in nature and not induced by the surface microstructure (as has been suggested earlier). Strong hydrophobicity in CTD over a relatively wide temperature range presumably results from the presence of the long aliphatic (tetradecanoate) chains in its structure. Importantly, the self-assembled copper tetradecanoate nanostrips can be dip-coated on glass to render it hydrophobic and at the same time retain a significant level of transparency over the entire visible region. Such nanostructured thin films may be expected to find applications not only as a self-cleaning glass, but also as a corrosion resistant coating, in gas storage (due to the layered structure), and as an active catalyst because of the visible absorbance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16874110
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Nanomaterials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
113954388
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/9596068