Abstract

Abstract With the increasing consumption of vegetable oils, value-added recycling of spent bleaching earth (SBE) is of wide concern. Here, we report a simple and sustainable method for converting SBE containing palygorskite (PAL) to hybrid carbon materials (PAL/C) with a nanorod-like structure, which can then be used as building blocks for the preparation of durable and fluorine-free superhydrophobic coatings. The PAL/C composites were prepared by calcination of the SBE containing PAL in air. Then, the homogeneous suspensions in ethanol were prepared by hydrolytic condensation of n-hexadecyltrimethoxysilane onto the PAL/C nanorods. Superhydrophobic coatings can be readily prepared by spray-coating the suspensions onto substrates. The PAL/C composites and the superhydrophobic coatings were characterized using a variety of analytical techniques including scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Superhydrophobicity of the coatings depends upon their surface topography, which can be precisely regulated by the calcination temperature of SBE and the concentration of the PAL/C composites in the suspensions. The superhydrophobic coatings show high water contact angle and extremely low sliding angle of 1.2°. The superhydrophobic coatings also feature high mechanical, thermal and chemical durability. This is because the PAL/C nanorods are closely linked and encapsulated together by polysiloxane (POS) among them, forming a highly crosslinked network. We believe that this study will shed light on the value-added recycling of SBE and cost-effective preparation of bioinspired antiwetting coatings.

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