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Author Correction: Smart low interfacial toughness coatings for on-demand de-icing without melting

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TLDR
In this article , the authors presented a smart, hybrid (passive and active) de-icing system through the combination of a low interfacial toughness coating, printed circuit board heaters, and an ice-detecting microwave sensor.
Abstract
Abstract Ice accretion causes problems in vital industries and has been addressed over the past decades with either passive or active de-icing systems. This work presents a smart, hybrid (passive and active) de-icing system through the combination of a low interfacial toughness coating, printed circuit board heaters, and an ice-detecting microwave sensor. The coating’s interfacial toughness with ice is found to be temperature dependent and can be modulated using the embedded heaters. Accordingly, de-icing is realized without melting the interface. The synergistic combination of the low interfacial toughness coating and periodic heaters results in a greater de-icing power density than a full-coverage heater system. The hybrid de-icing system also shows durability towards repeated icing/de-icing, mechanical abrasion, outdoor exposure, and chemical contamination. A non-contact planar microwave resonator sensor is additionally designed and implemented to precisely detect the presence or absence of water or ice on the surface while operating beneath the coating, further enhancing the system’s energy efficiency. Scalability of the smart coating is demonstrated using large (up to 1 m) iced interfaces. Overall, the smart hybrid system designed here offers a paradigm shift in de-icing that can efficiently render a surface ice-free without the need for energetically expensive interface melting.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Author Correction: Smart low interfacial toughness coatings for on-demand de-icing without melting

TL;DR: In this article , the authors presented a smart, hybrid (passive and active) de-icing system through the combination of a low interfacial toughness coating, printed circuit board heaters, and an ice-detecting microwave sensor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultra-fast and High-Sensitive Tacrolimus Solution Detection based on Microwave biosensor

TL;DR: In this article , a microwave biosensor based on a planar low-pass-split ring resonator was proposed for detecting tacrolimus concentrations in solution, and the results showed that the resonant frequency and insertion loss are highly linearly related to sample concentration for tacroclimus aqueous solution detection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Battery-Free, Artificial Neural Network-Assisted Microwave Resonator Array for Ice Detection

TL;DR: In this article , an ice detection system consisting of a battery-free, chip-less wirelessly interrogated resonator array, and an artificial neural network for enhanced detection robustness is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultra-robust icephobic coatings with high toughness, strong substrate adhesion and self-healing capability

TL;DR: In this paper , an ultra-robust transparent ice-phobic coating with high toughness, strong substrate adhesion, and self-healing capability is presented, which can sustain severe mechanical loading for use in real complex environments.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A critical review: vitamin b deficiency and nervous disease.

TL;DR: The artificial synthesis of a number of the components of the vitamin B complex has made available pure crystalline material in large amounts for clinical research, and thus a milestone in the history of these affections has been passed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Creating long-lived superhydrophobic polymer surfaces through mechanically assembled monolayers.

TL;DR: It is established that elastomeric surfaces can be tailored using "mechanically assembled monolayers" (MAMs), structures that are fabricated by combining self-assembly of surface grafting molecules with mechanical manipulation of the grafting points in the underlying elastic surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

State-of-the-art on power line de-icing

TL;DR: A comparative evaluation of the different de-icing techniques, already developed and in development, which could be applied to the conductors and wires of electric power lines, based on energy efficiency and practicability suggests to favor the mechanical techniques over thermal methods that have been developed, but require more energy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Designing durable icephobic surfaces

TL;DR: It is shown that, irrespective of material chemistry, by tailoring the cross-link density of different elastomeric coatings and by enabling interfacial slippage, it is possible to systematically design coatings with extremely low ice adhesion (τice < 0.2 kPa).
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding the effect of superhydrophobic coatings on energy reduction in anti-icing systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of superhydrophobic coatings on surfaces exposed to icing conditions was studied in an open loop icing wind tunnel (IWT) on a standard NACA0021 airfoil in two different icing conditions.
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