Self-cleaning stainless steel surfaces induced by laser processing and chemical engineering

Abstract

Nanostructured surfaces show a variety of beneficial macroscopic effects. The combination of hierarchic nanostructures with a suitable chemical surface composition allows for the fabrication of surfaces with interesting fluidic properties beyond such effects. This approach enables the specification of nano/microstructure and chemical composition independent of each other. Various hierarchical micro- and nanostructures can be realized by laser texturing of stainless steel surfaces with infrared picosecond laser. Simultaneously, the surface is activated for chemical processing. The surface can now be tuned by bonding of a self-assembled monolayer on the laser-treated surface by chemical treatment. This two-step functionalization process allows the for separated adjusting of the surface topography and chemical composition and thus for the well-defined setting of the surface properties. The fabrication of superhydrophobic surfaces with self-cleaning properties are performed that can be functionalized further by subsequent laser-irradiation. Furthermore, the long-time stability of the surface functionalization in relation to the impact chemicals or radiation was investigated.

Description
Keywords
nanostructuring, SAM, self-assembled monolayer, stainless steel, superhydrophobic, Konferenzschrift
Citation
Lorenz, P., Zajadacz, J., Marquardt, F., Ehrhardt, M., Hommes, G., Peter, S., & Zimmer, K. (2022). Self-cleaning stainless steel surfaces induced by laser processing and chemical engineering. 111. https://doi.org//10.1016/j.procir.2022.08.019
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported