New coating promises to wipe away grease stains with water
August 22nd, 2009 - 4:02 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )
Washington, August 22 (ANI): A team of scientists has developed a new coating which promises that grease stains can be wiped away with plain old water.
According to a report by Discovery News, the new coating has been developed by Jeffrey Youngblood and colleagues at Purdue University in the US.
Incorporating this material into cleaning products, paints or sealants could reduce the need for environmentally damaging solvents and phosphate-containing detergents, according to the researchers.
Phosphate detergents can kill aquatic life by allowing algae and microbes to overgrow bodies of water, suffocating other animals by consuming the dissolved oxygen.
The new coating is made by binding a water-loving molecule to a Teflon-like molecule that repels oil.
This pairing makes for a surface that prevents oil from sticking to it, while also allowing it to be wet by water.
“Most surfaces that repel oils are inherently very water repellant as well. This works great for making something ‘non-stick’, but when the surface does get dirty, it’s basically impossible to clean the oil off without using soap,” said polymer scientist Ryan Hayward of the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
“Youngblood’s group has introduced a clever twist to this picture by directly incorporating soap-like components in their polymer coatings,” he added.
“These materials are resistant to oils but at the same time can be easily wet by water, meaning that an oil-coated surface can be cleaned simply by rinsing with water,” he explained.
“If these polymers can be made into robust coatings or fabrics, they could have real potential for reducing the amount of detergent that we use,” he said.
The first generation of the material was complicated and expensive to make. It took a graduate student about a week under stringent conditions to coat a piece of glass, according to Youngblood.
The latest work simplifies the process, creating a compound that can be mixed straight into a window cleaner, for instance.
“We are learning that our new products are not as good as our original technology, but add other benefits in terms of ease of use,” Youngblood said. “One might have to make a tradeoff,” he added.
The best quality coating might be worth the effort to apply to a telescope or camera lens (the coating also has anti-fog properties), he explained.
“For consumer products, we would have another system. It doesn’t work as well, maybe doesn’t last as long, but it’s much cheaper to produce,” he added. (ANI)
- New self-cleaning material to put an end to kitchen adversities - Aug 17, 2009
- New anti-fog coating to prevent fog formation on eyeglasses - Mar 17, 2011
- Simple polymer-based filter cleans water, recovers oil - Jun 08, 2010
- New material that turns oil into solid gel could help clean Gulf spill mess - Aug 07, 2010
- Pitcher plant inspires liquid repelling coating - Sep 23, 2011
- New material can help extract ketchup easily - Nov 13, 2011
- How "nanobubbles" keep water from wetting a super non-stick surface - Feb 26, 2010
- Artificial way to grow stem cells discovered - Aug 23, 2010
- New filtering technique could be answer to toxic oil spills - Nov 19, 2008
- 'Super skin' that can sense a fly land - Feb 25, 2011
- Soon, self-cleaning, wiper-free car windshields thanks to graphene - Feb 02, 2011
- 'Super sand' to purify drinking water - Jun 23, 2011
- World's thinnest material could come in handy as dispersing agent - Jun 15, 2010
- New filtering technology has environmental and industrial applications - Nov 19, 2008
- Fragranced products emit unlisted 'toxic' chemicals, shows study - Oct 31, 2010
Tags: bodies of water, cleaning products, clever twist, detergent, discovery news, grease stains, microbes, old water, phosphate detergents, piece of glass, polymer coatings, polymer scientist, purdue university, ryan hayward, sealants, stringent conditions, university of massachusetts, university of massachusetts amherst, water repellant, youngblood