Anti-Ice Coating Technology

Lubricant-infused polyurethane-based anti-ice/ice-shedding coatings with high hardness and self healing properties

Wind turbines in winter setting
Source: UllrichG, stock.adobe.com

Background

The accumulation of ice can have serious and disastrous consequences and is a major problem, in certain parts of the world, for a variety of industries, including automotive, aerospace, marine, power transmission, power production, telecommunications and agriculture. This has led to the development of 鈥渋cephobic鈥 coatings that either prevent the build up of ice or facilitate its removal via an environmental stimulus (e.g. wind). These coatings must withstand erosion, wear, UV radiation and other weathering conditions while being cost-effective, environmentally friendly and scalable, with respect to production. Unfortunately, many available coatings have limitations preventing their widespread adoption.

Technology Overview

Researchers at 黑料吃瓜资源 in Kingston, Canada have developed a lubricant鈥慽nfused, polyurethane鈥慴ased anti鈥慽ce/ice鈥憇hedding coating that has remarkably low ice鈥慳dhesion (4 orders of magnitude lower than bare glass), is mechanically robust, has the same bulk hardness as polyethylene terephthalate (PET), and is self鈥慼ealing. This fluorine鈥慺ree, bi鈥憀ayer coating comprise a surface 鈥渂rush鈥 layer of silicone oil鈥慽nfused polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and a cross鈥憀inked polyurethane matrix that contains sub鈥憇urface pores filled with PDMS and the silicone oil. The self鈥慼ealing properties of the coating arise when the silicone鈥憃il, contained within the sub鈥憇urface pores, migrates to the surface thereby regenerating the PDMS "brush" layer. This coating readily sheds ice at a tilt angle of just 3 degrees.

 

Anti-ice/ice-shedding coating
This schematic shows the anti鈥慽ce/ice鈥憇hedding coating comprising a lubricated (silicone鈥憃il) PDMS surface "brush" layer and a polyurethane matrix comprising sub鈥憇urface pores containing the lubricant and PDMS. 

 

Benefits

  • Ice readily sheds off of the coating at a tilt angles of just 3 degrees.
  • The coatings are based on polyurethane so they are mechanically robust and have high bulk hardness
  • The coatings are self鈥慼ealing and the surface 鈥渂rush鈥 layer can be re鈥慹stablished after wear or icing/deicing cycles
  • The coatings are applied in the same fashion as polyurethane鈥慴ased coatings with similar cure times

Applications

  • Solar panels
  • Wind turbines
  • Power lines and telecommunication cables
  • Windows and windshields
  • Suspension bridge cables
  • Etc.

Opportunity

Queen's University are seeking companies interested in developing and commercializing the technology.

Patent

  • WO2021159208A1

IP Status

  • Patent application submitted
  • Know-how based

Seeking

  • Development partner
  • Licensing
  • University spinout

Posted

May 18, 2022