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Science

Scientists Create World's Most Water-Resistant Surface (theguardian.com) 46

Sammy Gecsoyler reports via The Guardian: A research team in Finland, led by Robin Ras, from Aalto University, and aided by researchers from the University of Jyvaskyla, has developed a mechanism to make water droplets slip off surfaces with unprecedented efficacy. Cooking, transportation, optics and hundreds of other technologies are affected by how water sticks to surfaces or slides off them, and adoption of water-resistant surfaces in the future could improve many household and industrial technologies, such as plumbing, shipping and the auto industry. The research team created solid silicon surfaces with a "liquid-like" outer layer that repels water by making droplets slide off surfaces. The highly mobile topcoat acts as a lubricant between the product and the water droplets.

Sakari Lepikko, the lead author of the study, which was published in Nature Chemistry on Monday, said: "Our work is the first time that anyone has gone directly to the nanometer-level to create molecularly heterogeneous surfaces." By carefully adjusting conditions, such as temperature and water content, inside a reactor, the team could fine-tune how much of the silicon surface the monolayer covered. Using the new method, the team ended up creating the slipperiest liquid surface in the world. According to Lepikko, the discovery promises to have implications wherever droplet-repellent surfaces are needed. This covers hundreds of examples from daily life to industrial environments.

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Scientists Create World's Most Water-Resistant Surface

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  • Naah... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by korgitser ( 1809018 ) on Tuesday October 24, 2023 @03:40AM (#63948273)
    The slipperiest surface known to man is a politician's skin.
  • Sounds great but can it be made totally transparent and bullet-proof so it can be used on mobile phone screens?

  • by thrill12 ( 711899 ) on Tuesday October 24, 2023 @03:49AM (#63948289) Journal
    Can't imagine this working without some variant of a "forever chemical" like PFAS (https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsami.2c01499 'However, virtually all such [Omniphobic] membranes are fabricated with long-chain per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)') : would be good to include in the summary 'completely bio-degradable' if that is not the case - and it seems it is not.
  • Now imagine smartphone manufacturers using that coating for the backside of their phones... Instant profit!

    • by dbialac ( 320955 )
      You don't have to wait. There's already NeverWet. I used it on a pair of hiking boots. It's amazing. I've been through piles of mud and they come out clean. I've gone into shallower waters and they come out bone dry.
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday October 24, 2023 @04:35AM (#63948317)

    I remember a former sysadmin colleague who smelled like he was extremely water-resistant.

  • the monolayer

    It sounds like this "nanometre scale" coating would be easily damaged. It would be handy to know how much wear and tear it can take before it becomes useless.

    • The two problems with all of these nanotech developments have always been how terrible nanoparticles are for living things and how fragile the actual products are.

    • by Teun ( 17872 )
      The article uses two words with different meanings; water and liquid.
      Maybe the liquid part is only referring to the coating.
      As the product has been carefully adjusted to repel water my worry is that only a small amount of a contaminant in the water might damage the slippery surface or even make it ineffective.
  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Tuesday October 24, 2023 @06:12AM (#63948417)
    As a coating on the hull of a boat
    • As a coating on the hull of a boat

      Sounds like something I might like to "wax" my car with.

    • Boats typically use sacrificial surface coats to keep marine growth under control. Regardless of the friction coefficient, the bottom of your boat is going to get damaged over time no matter what.

  • It's the stuff that's in it and parts of that always stay behind, ruining the effects after some time.

  • There's a coating available (aka 'marble') that uses a qusicrystal-heavy ceramic coating rather than the PF* family.

    It doesn't last forever and it's about double the cost of a teflon pan but it works well. Somehow quasicrystals prevent normal sticking.

    You can find Korean imports on eBay. QW, etc.

    The discount store 'ceramic' pans suck and often are coated wirh teflon anyway.

    I'm still convinced that home cooking with teflon is a better bet than processed foods but why not avoid it if you can?

    Or just polish ca

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      I try to rely on cast iron, but it's heavy, and there are lots of applications where it's not reasonable.

      So far I haven't encountered a universal best surface, even for a field a limited as cooking.

  • At first I thought this might benefit car bodies which get rusty where I live. But then I realized the new surface would also have to repel "everything else" in the environment, too, like mold, dirt, tree sap. etc. Otherwise the water would stick to those which would stick to the car's surface at the microscopic level.
  • Silicon? Or silicone?

    The summary and the article says silicon, but that seems unlikely. (and the paper itself is behind a paywall).

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Silicon? Or silicone?

      A lot of different things are discuessed.

      A liquid-like layer of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), perfluoropolyether (PFPE) and polyisobutene (PIB). Four types of liquid-like surfaces (LLSs): polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-grafted, perfluoropolyether (PFPE)-grafted, alkyl-grafted and polyethylene glycol (PEG)-grafted LLSs. Copolymer of cage-like polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (POSS) bearing PDMS (POSS-g-PDMS) and copolymer of ladder-like polysilsesquioxane (LASQ) bearing PFPE (LASQ-g-PFPE), which are us

    • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

      Silicon? Or silicone?

      The summary and the article says silicon, but that seems unlikely. (and the paper itself is behind a paywall).

      I am from Italy and here we call them both sicilicon.

    • Just remember this: silicon is what quartz is made out of; silicones are what your girlfriend has implanted to get a bigger cup size.
      • Good mnemonic, but to be clear, silica is what quartz is made of. Silicate is what rocks are made of. Silly cat [google.com] is what memes are made of. And silicon is what chips are made of.

        *(not the ones you eat).

  • What happens if watercraft (both big and small - from jet skis to the giant cargo ships) have a coating of this?

    Will it reduce / increase / no change in terms of friction thru the water?

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      The real question is "Will it keep off barnacles?". If it will, then it may find lots of uses (but see next paragraph), even if it doesn't do much else. But I'm not sure that barnacle adhesion is based on water rather than oils.

      My suspicion is that it will be expensive enough that boat and ship surfaces are unreasonable. Look for uses in other areas, where you need to cover smaller areas.

      • There are some applications where the expense is alot less important compared to capability usually.

        Three letter agencies and the armed forces comes to mind.

        That's assuming the coating does help with friction or something else.

  • If so... bad idea for the water supply.
  • ...these quacks reinvented the duck.

  • Can this be used to make sure my cornflakes won't get soggy?
  • in the form of cats. Sorry - that's the most water averse.

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