posted on 2023-05-20, 02:47authored byKoshio, K, Arai, K, Waku, T, Peter Wilson, Hagiwara, Y
The development of ice-phobic, glass-substrate surfaces is important for many reasons such as poor visibility through the ice-covered windshields of vehicles. The present authors have developed new glass surfaces coated with a silane coupling agent and polypeptides whose amino-Acid sequence is identical to a partial sequence of winter flounder antifreeze protein. We have conducted experiments on the freezing of sessile water droplets on the glass surfaces, and measured the droplet temperature, contact angle, contact area and surface roughness. The results show that the supercooling temperature decreased noticeably in the case where a higher concentration solution of polypeptide was used for the coating. The adhesion strength of frozen droplets was lowest in the same case. In addition, we observed many nanoscale humps on the coated surface, which were formed by polypeptide aggregates in the solution. We argue that the combination of the hydrophilic humps and the hydrophobic base surfaces causes water molecules adjacent to the surfaces to have a variety of orientations in that plane, even after the ice layer started to grow. This then induces a misfit of water-molecule spacing in the ice layers and consequent formation of fragile polycrystalline structure. This explains the lower values of ice adhesion strength and supercooling enhancement in the cases of the polypeptide-coated glass plates.
History
Publication title
PLoS ONE
Volume
13
Issue
10
Article number
e0204686
Number
e0204686
Pagination
1-15
ISSN
1932-6203
Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Place of publication
United States
Rights statement
Copyright 2018 Koshio et al. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/