Mussel‐Inspired, Self‐Healing, Highly Effective Fully Polymeric Fire‐Retardant Coatings Enabled by Group Synergy
Article
Article Title | Mussel‐Inspired, Self‐Healing, Highly Effective Fully Polymeric Fire‐Retardant Coatings Enabled by Group Synergy |
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ERA Journal ID | 4865 |
Article Category | Article |
Authors | Ma, Zhewen, Feng, Jiabing, Huo, Siqi, Sun, Ziqi, Bourbigot, Serge, Wang, Hao, Gao, Jiefeng, Tang, Longcheng, Zheng, Wei and Song, Pingan |
Journal Title | Advanced Materials |
Article Number | 2410453 |
Number of Pages | 19 |
Year | 2024 |
Publisher | John Wiley & Sons |
Place of Publication | Germany |
ISSN | 0935-9648 |
1521-4095 | |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202410453 |
Web Address (URL) | https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adma.202410453 |
Abstract | Fire-retardant coatings represent a universal cost-effective approach to providing fire protection for various substrates without compromising substrates’ bulk properties. However, it has been attractive yet highly challenging to create waterborne polymeric fire-retardant coatings combining high-efficiency, generally strong adhesion, and self-repairability due to a lack of rational design principles. Inspired by mussel's unique adhesive, self-healing, and char-forming mechanisms, herein, a “group synergy” design strategy is proposed to realize the combination of self-healing, strong adhesion, and high efficiency in a fully polymeric fire-retardant coating via multiple synergies between catechol, phosphonic, and hydroxyethyl groups. As-created fire-retardant coating exhibits a rapid room-temperature self-healing ability and strong adhesion to (non)polar substrates due to multiple dynamic non-covalent interactions enabled by these groups. Because these functional groups enable the formation of a robust structurally intact yet slightly expanded char layer upon exposure to flame, a 200 µm-thick such coating can make extremely flammable polystyrene foam very difficult to ignite and self-extinguishing, which far outperforms previous strategies. Moreover, this coating can provide universal exceptional fire protection for a variety of substrates from polymer foams, and timber, to fabric and steel. This work presents a promising material design principle to create next-generation sustainable high-performance fire-retardant coatings for general fire protection. |
Contains Sensitive Content | Does not contain sensitive content |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 401609. Polymers and plastics |
Byline Affiliations | Tongji University, China |
Centre for Future Materials | |
Queensland University of Technology | |
University of Lille, France | |
School of Engineering | |
Yangzhou University, China | |
Hangzhou Normal University, China | |
School of Agriculture and Environmental Science |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/z94x9/mussel-inspired-self-healing-highly-effective-fully-polymeric-fire-retardant-coatings-enabled-by-group-synergy
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Advanced Materials - 2024 - Ma - Mussel‐Inspired Self‐Healing Highly Effective Fully Polymeric Fire‐Retardant Coatings.pdf | ||
License: CC BY 4.0 | ||
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