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Kreder, Michael

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Kreder

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Michael

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Kreder, Michael

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Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication

    Inhibition of ice nucleation by slippery liquid-infused porous surfaces (SLIPS)

    (Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2013) Wilson, Peter W.; Lu, Weizhe; Xu, Haojun; Kim, Philseok; Kreder, Michael; Alvarenga, Jack; Aizenberg, Joanna

    Ice repellent coatings have been studied and keenly sought after for many years, where any advances in the durability of such coatings will result in huge energy savings across many fields. Progress in creating anti-ice and anti-frost surfaces has been particularly rapid since the discovery and development of slippery, liquid infused porous surfaces (SLIPS). Here we use SLIPS-coated differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) pans to investigate the effects of the surface modification on the nucleation of supercooled water. This investigation is inherently different from previous studies which looked at the adhesion of ice to SLIPS surfaces, or the formation of ice under high humidity conditions. Given the stochastic nature of nucleation of ice from supercooled water, multiple runs on the same sample are needed to determine if a given surface coating has a real and statistically significant effect on the nucleation temperature. We have cycled supercooling to freezing and then thawing of deionized water in hydrophilic (untreated aluminum), hydrophobic, superhydrophobic, and SLIPS-treated DSC pans multiple times to determine the effects of surface treatment on the nucleation and subsequent growth of ice. We find that SLIPS coatings lower the nucleation temperature of supercooled water in contact with statistical significance and show no deterioration or change in the coating performance even after 150 freeze-thaw cycles.

  • Publication

    Design of anti-icing surfaces: smooth, textured or slippery?

    (Springer Nature, 2016) Kreder, Michael; Alvarenga, Jack; Kim, Philseok; Aizenberg, Joanna

    Passive anti-icing surfaces, or icephobic surfaces, are an area of great interest because of their significant economic, energy and safety implications in the prevention and easy removal of ice in many facets of society. The complex nature of icephobicity, which requires performance in a broad range of icing scenarios, creates many challenges when designing ice-repellent surfaces. Although superhydrophobic surfaces incorporating micro- or nanoscale roughness have been shown to prevent ice accumulation under certain conditions, the same roughness can be detrimental in other environments. Surfaces that present a smooth liquid interface can eliminate some of the drawbacks of textured superhydrophobic surfaces, but additional study is needed to fully realise their potential. As more attention begins to shift towards alternative anti-icing strategies, it is important to consider and understand the nature of ice repellency in all environments to identify the limitations of current solutions and design new materials with robust icephobicity.