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Fouling Resistance of Brush-Modified Elastomers.

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The most effective antifouling coatings are designed to slowly release biocides that target a broad spectrum of marine organisms. However, as biocides have a deleterious effect on marine life, there… Click to show full abstract

The most effective antifouling coatings are designed to slowly release biocides that target a broad spectrum of marine organisms. However, as biocides have a deleterious effect on marine life, there is demand for environmentally friendly coatings that resist fouling through physical interactions. We propose a simple platform for the development of such coatings based on bottlebrush-modified elastomers. The bottlebrush additives were synthesized to have side chain chemistries that are known to be fouling-resistant, and these were incorporated in a commercial elastomer through blending and/or covalent attachment. The fouling performance of these coatings was highly variable, with area coverages of hard and soft foulants ranging from 1.4% to 7.2% and 29.1% to 64.0%, respectively, across a set of eight materials. The origin of these differences was explained by examining the structure of the coating surface through chemical imaging by time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) and topographic imaging by atomic force microscopy (AFM). We found that fouling by certain soft and hard fouling organisms was primarily influenced by surface composition, which was controlled by both the chemistry and loading level of the bottlebrush additive, and was independent of the inherent surface roughness. While no type of coating could resist all soft and hard foulants, a formulation based on a bottlebrush copolymer additive with both siloxane and fluorinated monomers was effective against nearly all organisms encountered in the study.

Keywords: modified elastomers; brush modified; chemistry; microscopy; fouling resistance; resistance brush

Journal Title: ACS applied materials & interfaces
Year Published: 2023

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