Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Nanocoating could eliminate foggy windows and lenses

Nanocoating could eliminate foggy windows and lenses

August 29, 2005

Foggy windows and lenses are a nuisance, and in the case of automobile windows, can pose a driving hazard. Now, a group of scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) may have found a permanent solution to the problem. The team has developed a unique polymer coating - made of silica nanoparticles - that they say can create surfaces that never fog.

The transparent coating can be applied to eyeglasses, camera lenses, ski goggles even bathroom mirrors, they say. The new coating was described today at the 230th national meeting of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society.




Researchers have been developing anti-fog technology for years, but each approach has its drawbacks. Some stores carry special anti-fog sprays that help reduce fogging on the inside of car windows, but the sprays must be constantly reapplied to remain effective. Glass containing titanium dioxide also shows promise for reduced fogging, but the method only works in the presence of ultraviolet (UV) light, researchers say.

"Our coatings have the potential to provide the first permanent solution to the fogging problem," says study leader Michael Rubner, Ph.D., a materials science researcher at MIT in Cambridge, Mass. "They remain stable over long periods, don't require light to be activated and can be applied to virtually any surface." Coated glass appears clearer and allows more light to pass through than untreated glass while maintaining the same smooth texture, he says.

The coatings consist of alternating layers of silica nanoparticles, which are basically tiny particles of glass, and a polymer called polyallylamine hydrochloride, both of which are relatively cheap to manufacture, Rubner says. He has applied for a patent on the manufacturing process and says that the coating could be available in consumer products in two to five years. The military and at least two major car manufacturers have already expressed interest in using the technology, he says.

When fogging occurs, thousands of tiny water droplets condense on glass and other surfaces. The droplets scatter light in random patterns, causing the surfaces to become translucent or foggy. This often occurs when a cold surface suddenly comes into contact with warm, moist air.

The new coating prevents this process from occurring, primarily through its super-hydrophilic, or water-loving, nature, Rubner says. The nanoparticles in the coating strongly attract the water droplets and force them to form much smaller contact angles with the surface. As a result, the droplets flatten and merge into a uniform, transparent sheet rather than forming countless individual light-scattering spheres. "The coating

basically causes water that hits the surfaces to develop a sustained sheeting effect, and that prevents fogging," Rubner says.

The same coatings also can be engineered to have superior anti-reflective properties that reduce glare and maximize the amount of light passing through, an effect that shows promise for improving materials used in greenhouses and solar cell panels, the researcher says. So far, the coating is more durable on glass than plastic surfaces, but Rubner and his associates are currently working on processes to optimize the effectiveness of the coating for all surfaces. More testing is needed, they say.

Funding for this study was provided by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the National Science Foundation (via the Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers, or MSREC).

The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit organization, chartered by the U.S. Congress, with a multidisciplinary membership of more than 158,000 chemists and chemical engineers. It publishes numerous scientific journals and databases, convenes major research conferences and provides educational, science policy and career programs in chemistry. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.

American Chemical Society




More Foggy Windows Current Events and Foggy Windows News Articles


Foggy Windows
by Carless, A. Grays

From the moment of her conception, men had found increasingly innovative ways to complicate her life. Now this one had to turn up dead. Convinced that no one would believe in the innocence of a poor, black, adulterous woman---especially when the deceased was a wealthy, white man with a white wife and four white kids---Chelsey George makes the best decision she can at the time: she closes the...



Heat, Volume 0

12 erotic stories featuring married couples, and filled with action in every setting imaginable. From the Old West to Outer Space, these tales are sure to please. Featuring stories from David Bischoff, Billie Sue Mosiman, Gary Braunbeck and many of today`s top...

Heat, Volume 2

12 erotic stories featuring married couples, and filled with action in every setting imaginable. From the Old West to Outer Space, these tales are sure to please. Featuring stories from David Bischoff, Daniel Ransom, Jonathan Morgan, and many...



Dying for It
by Tim Waggoner

Justin & Liana Mallory are husband and wife. They`re also private investigators. Fortunately enough for them, both work and play go together quite naturally, as nothing gets them quite as excited as working on a case. However, when Wyatt Trower, an old flame of Liana`s asks for help, jealousy rears its ugly head, right up until he turns up dead in an alley. Now it`s up to Liana and Justin to find...



This Flesh Unknown
by Gary A. Braunbeck

What happens when we dream of our spouse as he or she once was? Does a door in the universe open, letting these secret fantasies become all to real?Paul and Vanessa Howe are about to find out what happens when their erotic passions and fantasies go to far and take on a unique life of their...



Nice Girls Do
by Leslie Joyce

Evelyn Girot and her husband Charles are keeping secrets - from themselves, from each other, and most importantly, from the occupying Nazi forces in Southern France. In the trying circumstances of World War II, it`s hard to trust anyone, but Evelyn and Charles must learn to trust each other if they - and the French Resistance - are to survive. Set in Nice, France, Evelyn must discover her own...



Blackmail and Lace
by Daniel Ransom

A western novel of intrigue and mystery about a young frontier lawyer racing to find out the truth about of very explicit diary, blackmail, and bank robbery with the help of his beautiful half-breed wife. This is the first western novel by best-selling author Daniel Ransom, featuring great sex scenes, lots of old west action, and a surprise ending that will leave you...



Bump and Run
by Edward Taft

This thriller features a married couple of Seattle police officers who put their vacation (but not their sex lives) on hold to catch a killer and protect a US senator. PUBCOMMENTS: A former golf professional in Palm Springs, California, Edward Taft turned to writing in the early 1980s. Since then he has published over fifty novels under varied names. Edward wants the readers to know that the...



The Diplomatic Touch
by David Bischoff

It`s outer-space hilarity, mayhem, and temptation as a husband-and-wife duo of intergalactic diplomats tries to recruit a new planet into the interplanetary federation. Unfortunately, the inhabitants of Nocturne III have a lot more on their minds than just talking. Lots of great jokes punning the science-fiction genre, cult movies, and...



Hot Waters
by Erica Lyon

When Sara Carpenter decides to work as a deckhand with her husband Matt on their small fishing boat, it seems a simple choice of economics. Working on the open sea is dangerous, but neither she, nor her husband, are prepared when the real trouble starts. While spending a romantic night in a secluded cove, Matt and Sara run head-on into a Russian smuggling operation - and the chase is on! Their...

© 2008 BrightSurf.com