Plant-based, aqueous, water-repellent sprays for coating textiles.
Sara K FleetwoodSydney BellReinhard JetterE Johan FosterPublished in: Soft matter (2023)
Novel superhydrophobic coatings, that are both biodegradable and biosourced, have the potential to revolutionize the water-repellent coating industry. Here, water-repellent coatings were prepared from commercially unavailable plant waxes, isolated using solvent extraction and characterized using DSC, GC-MS and DLS. In the first stage, a plant survey was conducted to identify an ideal plant source for the final spray, in which Whatman filter paper was submerged in a wax-solvent solution with recrystallization occurring upon air-drying. In the second stage, aqueous, PFC-free wax dispersions were prepared, coated onto textiles (cotton and polyester), and heat-treated with a home drying machine to allow for the spreading and recrystallization of the waxes. In both stages, SEM visualization verified the coating's morphology, and contact angle measurements showed them to be superhydrophobic. It was concluded that, using less coating material than commercial coatings, high-performing petroleum-free coatings could be made and applied onto textiles of various polarities.