posted on 2025-04-30, 12:10authored byRuifeng Jiang, Xiao Wang, Shengmao Chao, Yongqian Chen, Jinpeng Wen, Yongsheng Li, Ai Lu, Hong Shao, Changyu Tang
Although bulk superhydrophobic material
can maintain
durable superhydrophobicity
by its micro–nanostructure regeneration for promising application,
the 3D printing is still challenging due to the requirement of a large
amount of solvent and complicated fabrication processing. Herein,
a solvent-free and self-foaming polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based
ink is developed for 3D printing bulk superhydrophobic objects. The
ink incorporates thermally expandable microspheres (EMs) and polytetrafluoroethylene
(PTFE) particles, enabling hierarchical roughness and low surface
energy throughout the bulk. During thermal curing, EMs generate cellular
pores (20–50 μm) and disrupt the formation of a dense
skin layer in the cured PDMS ink, while PTFE particles migrate to
the surface, achieving a Cassie-state superhydrophobicity with a water
contact angle of 155° and a sliding angle of 9°. The printed
foam exhibits exceptional durability, retaining superhydrophobicity
after 1000 abrasion cycles due to self-similar porous structures.
Rheological optimization ensures printability, and the lightweight
foam (density of 0.16 g/cm3) demonstrates versatile applications,
including waterproofing, oil–water separation, and waterproof
buoyancy carrier for a drone (supporting 7× its weight). This
work presents an environmentally benign and facile strategy for fabricating
robust, bulk superhydrophobic materials with scalable 3D printing,
advancing their potential in sustainable industrial and environmental
applications.