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The Most Waterproof Clothing Fabric

The creation was led by Stefan Seeger, from University of Zurich, who has revealed that that drops of water stay as spherical balls on top of the fabric, and a sheet of the material need only be tilted by two degrees from horizontal for them to roll off like marbles. The water jet goes-off without a trace.
Stefan
Seeger
attributes
the
the
incredible
water
resistance
of
the
material
to
a
layer
of
silicone
nanofilaments,
which
are
highly
chemically
hydrophobic.
Furthermore,
the
effects
gets
strengthened
by
the
spiky
structure
of
the
40-nanometre-wide
filaments,
which
creates
a
coating
that
prevents
water
droplets
from
soaking
through
the
coating
to
the
polyester
fibres
underneath.
"The
combination
of
the
hydrophobic
surface
chemistry
and
the
nanostructure
of
the
coating
results
in
the
super-hydrophobic
effect.
The
water
comes
to
rest
on
the
top
of
the
nanofilaments
like
a
fakir
sitting
on
a
bed
of
nails," New
Scientist
magazine
quoted
Seeger
as
saying.
A layer of air is trapped in between the silicone nanofilamnets to create a permanent air layer, known as plastrons, which ensures that water never comes into contact with the polyester fabric. The fiber remains dry even after being submerged in water for two months.
According to Stefan Seeger, preliminary experiments have shown that the plastron layer can reduce drag when moving from water by up to 20 per cent. "This could be very interesting for athletic swimwear applications," he suggests, raising the possibility of future swimsuits that never get wet. The final process to create the new coating involves just one step, in which silicone in gas form condenses onto the fibers to form nanofilaments.
"Although the textiles did show some degradation in the mechanical abrasion tests, their performance was very impressive. The era of self-cleaning clothes may be closer than we think," Steven Bell, director of the Innovative Molecular Materials Group at Queen's University Belfast, said.
The
coating
can
be
added
to
other
textiles,
including
wool,
viscose
and
cotton,
although
polyester
currently
gives
the
best
results.
The
new
coating
is
durable
and
unlike
some
water-resistant
coatings,
it
remains
more-or-less
intact
when
the
fabric
is
rubbed
vigorously,
though
it
could
not
survive
the
washing
machine
cycles.



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