Relationships between Water Wettability and Ice Adhesion
Edwards Air Force Base · Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract
Ice formation and accretion may hinder the operation of many systems critical to national infrastructure, including airplanes, power lines, windmills, ships, and telecommunications equipment. Yet despite the pervasiveness of the icing problem, the fundamentals of ice adhesion have received relatively little attention in the scientific literature and it is not widely understood which attributes must be tuned to systematically design "icephobic" surfaces that are resistant to icing. Here we probe the relationships between advancing/receding water contact angles and the strength of ice adhesion to bare steel and twenty-one different test coatings (∼200-300 nm thick) applied to the nominally smooth steel discs.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 70
Authors
6- AJAdam J. MeulerCorresponding
Edwards Air Force Base, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- JDJonathan D. Smith
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Edwards Air Force Base
- KKKripa K. Varanasi
Edwards Air Force Base, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- JMJoseph M. Mabry
Edwards Air Force Base, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- GHGareth H. McKinley
Edwards Air Force Base, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Topics & keywords
- Materials science
- Contact angle
- Adhesion
- Wetting
- Icing
- Composite material
- Surface energy
- Nanotechnology
- Industry, innovation and infrastructure