The Free Press Journal

No more ‘icing’ on the cars

- PIC: 24UR.COM

Researcher­s have created a durable silicone polymer coating capable of repelling ice from any surface. Icy weather is blamed for multi-billion dollar losses every year in the US, including delays and damage related to air travel, infrastruc­ture and power generation and transmissi­on facilities, said researcher­s from the University of Houston.

Finding effective, durable and environmen­tally stable de-icing materials has been stymied by the stubborn tenacity with which ice adheres to the materials on which it forms, they said. The researcher­s reported a new theory in physics called stress localisati­on, which they used to tune and predict the properties of new materials.

Based on those prediction­s, they have created a durable silicone polymer coating capable of repelling ice from any surface. “We have developed a new physical concept and the correspond­ing icephobic material that shows extremely low ice adhesion while having long-term mechanical, chemical and environmen­tal durability,” the researcher­s said.

Hadi Ghasemi, an assistant professor at the University of Houston, said the findings suggest a way to take trial and error out of the search for new materials, in keeping with the movement of materials science towards a physics-driven approach. “You put in the properties you want, and the principle will tell you what material you need to synthesise,” he said.

Ghasemi previously has reported developing several new icephobic materials, but he said those, like other existing materials, have not been able to completely overcome the problem of ice adhering to the surface, along with issues of mechanical and environmen­tal durability.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India