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2025
Journal Article
Title
Tensile ice adhesion of bulk water ice on flat and microstructured hydrophobized polymer surfaces vs. reference materials
Abstract
To validate the de-icing effectiveness in static icing conditions, we measured the tensile ice adhesion on durable, hydrophobic (flat) and superhydrophobic (microstructured by hot embossing, D > 35 µm) polyurethane (PU) films, coated with thin fluorocarbon or silicone-like plasma polymers, in comparison to conventional metal and polymer reference surfaces. Bulk water ice cylinders (4 mm in diameter) were removed from the samples at -20 °C, and the influence of material elasticity, microcracks resulting from local stress, surface chemistry, micro- and nano-roughness was investigated. The tensile ice adhesion was lowest on flat, hydrophobic PU films, due to high material elasticity and the presence of microcracks, whereas it was highest on superhydrophobic surfaces, because of mechanical interlocking from mixed wetting states. The impact of nanoscale roughness on ice adhesion is negligible on flat surfaces, whereas it significantly enhances adhesion on microstructured surfaces due to the hierarchical roughness. Condition-adapted surface design is of crucial importance for effective de-icing.
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